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Image credit:Rock Paper Shotgun/Thunderful Publishing

Image credit:Rock Paper Shotgun/Thunderful Publishing

A bazaar in a Lego Bricktales VR level, with the player talking to a ‘painfully rich merchant’

VR is at its best when it makes you feel like you’re living in the actual future. Given how everything new and exciting ultimately becomes normal and mundane, this is perhaps an unfair expectation of technology that is now a decade old. Nonetheless, if you want me to sit with a shoebox pressed uncomfortably against my eyes for two hours like an ocular gom jabbar, then what’s inside the shoebox better be pretty darned transformative.

Which is to say that LEGO Bricktales provided one of those moments. I was sat in my living room, with all its clutter visible through the Quest 3’s coloured passthrough, and hovering above my table was a great big LEGO diorama of a jungle. All of it was rendered perfectly to scale, as if I could pick up the minifigs between my thumb and forefinger. Yet all of it was moving of its own accord, as if I’d somehow stumbled into a child’s dream.

Crash. In barrels the future, smashing through the temporal wall like the Kool-Aid Guy. You can play with LEGO that moves now. Oh yeah!

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If you just laughed and/or gagged at the phrase “Happiness Cubes”, don’t worry, the game’s writing is better than this summary makes it seem. It’s light on plot, heavy on jokes, and while a slight lack of precision stops many gags from beinghi-larious, most of them elicited a daft grin or a light chuckle from me. In short, not as good as the LEGO Movie, but better than the LEGO Batman Movie.

The point is you’re going to be visiting numerous LEGO worlds, which in VR resemble larger versions of the rotating cube levels seen in the Nintendo Switch game Captain Toad: Treasure Tracker. These, incidentally, aremarvellous, big, shiny, hefty-looking LEGO that would cost £thousands in real-life, only with water than glistens, animated characters, and cute collectible animals like chameleons and LEGO-dot ladybirds that wiggle around in an alarmingly winning manner. You can also grab the edges of each level with your tourch controllers and move it around in your hands, viewing it from different angles, and lifting it to eye level so you can peer through its caves and tunnels.

Image credit:Rock Paper Shotgun/Thunderful Publishing

An Ancient Egypt-themed level in Lego Bricktales VR, with a large pyramid on the player’s living room table

These building puzzles are more challenging than I expected, although I wouldn’t go so far as to call them difficult. To start with, Bricktales features a basic physics simulation, so you need to ensure that each build is structurally sound. Your bridge or stairway must be connected to the starting anchor point, and support the weight of your character at all connections. In addition, each puzzle furnishes you with a combination of bricks that tend toward the eclectic. Rare is it you’ll get more than a couple of 4x2 blocks, and you’ll often be building with a handful of plastic shrapnel that requires careful, considered assembly.

Aside from the unavoidable lack of tactility, Bricktales' building system is intuitive and satisfying. It is a slightshame that it pulls you out of its colourful worlds for each building activity. Building something separately and then seeing it appear in the game world isn’t as fun as gradually assembling it in situ, even if it makes the actual construction process easier.

Outside of the building challenges, your character acquires numerous abilities that let them navigate other obstacles in the world. There are five of these in total, including a stomp ability that breaks objects like pots and small plants, and an X-ray vision mode that highlights invisible objects on the world (and briefly turns your LEGO avatar into a LEGO skeleton, one of the game’s better visual gags). Some paths will push you further along the story, while others lead to optional rewards like currency-filled treasure chests, which you can use to buy new outfits for your blocky self. Not all these paths are accessible immediately, meaning you’ll return to previous worlds often if you want to explore everything.

Image credit:Rock Paper Shotgun/Thunderful Publishing

A jungle level in Lego Bricktales being played in VR

A bazaar in a Lego Bricktales VR level, with the player talking to a ‘painfully rich merchant’

I’ve no major complaints about what LEGO Bricktales does. The story is a heap of nonsense, but in a way that’s mostly fun, and I’d prefer the building puzzles to be embedded in the world itself. There are, however, a couple of things Bricktales doesn’tdo that feel like missed opportunities. The first is a dedicated sandbox mode which lets you build whatever you want. You can play around with individual puzzle sets once you’ve completed them, but that’s still limiting compared to what Bricktales couldlet you do.

In addition, while Bricktales uses the Quest 3’s mixed reality features to project its giant puzzle cubes into your living space, it isn’treallya mixed reality game. You can orient the dioramas so it looks like you’re playing LEGO on your table, but the game doesn’t let you interact with your table, playing with virtual LEGO toys in your own space. In fairness to ClockStone, Bricktales wasn’t designed specificallyforQuest 3. Heck, it wasn’t designed for VR at all initially, which makes it quality as a VR game all the more impressive. But such a feature would not only justify the Quest 3’s MR features, it would also make Bricktales an absolute must have.

As it stands, Bricktales is merely an excellent VR game, rather than an essential one. But I’ve thoroughly enjoyed my time with it, a gentle, funny VR puzzler that’s a little chewier than I expected, but not too much. And those first few minutes with it, looking down at a LEGO set come to life, were wondrous in a way I’m unlikely to forget anytime soon. Be careful giving it to your children, because their heads might just explode.