Take the raptor kitchen scene from Jurassic Park one of the dinos sports a hairnet of cherries after an investigation of one cupboard. The result is authentic, entertaining and amusing. TT Games takes a slightly different approach to the source material this time round, stitching original dialogue pulled from the films together with new voice work and then spinning the scenes towards humour. For the main these abilities are used to collect additional Lego bricks, but they are also often crucial to your progress, a howl distracting a dino at the right time, or a jump allowing access to a lofty platform. Lex's screams in the first flick were irritating to the ears. When it comes to the main characters, the ones you'll definitely recognise, the studio's to be commended for working out everyone's special abilities and keeping them both interesting and tied to the source material. There's other games in the Lego family that rely on the richness of the roster to drive replayability, but this just isn't the case with Jurassic World. One downside is that you'll have a harder time recognising the majority of the 100+ characters that are available for unlocking here park staff and bystanders joining your ever-growing roster hasn't the same thrill as, say, unlocking the extended cast of characters from Lego Star Wars. That means only the best beats from the flicks make the cut, making for some great stages. Unlike say, Lego Hobbit - which like its celluloid counterpart, felt like too much filler - Lego Jurassic World keeps things tight by splitting its twenty level structure evenly between all four films.
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It's likely down to the licence and how it's been handled. And yet, again, we find our tastebuds becoming curious as soon as the latest offering is dished out onto our console plate. A well-known recipe and one that, several years and many tie-ins later, we find we're losing the taste for. TT Games takes cinematic material, strips out the most iconic scenes, then piles on the typical Lego humour.