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LEGO Dimensions Starter Pack - Nintendo Wii U

  • Based on 1,099 reviews
Condition: New
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Availability: In Stock.
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Arrives Monday, May 27
Order within 1 hour and 49 minutes
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Features

  • LEGO characters from a mix of some of the best brands in the universe join forces and battle in worlds outside of their own. A Dark Knight, a Wizard, and a LEGO Master Builder traveling together down the Yellow Brick Road is just the beginning.
  • Bring up to seven , vehicles and/or gadgets into the game all at once by dropping them on the LEGO Toy Pad for the most exciting and action-filled game around.
  • Players can let imagination guide their solo journey or have a friend join the adventure with co-operative, drop-in/drop-out play.
  • LEGO Dimensions is a system of play that offers continued compatibility - everything bought today or expanded with tomorrow will continue to work.

Description

When a mysterious and powerful vortex suddenly appears in various LEGO worlds, different characters from DC Comics, The Lord of the Rings and The LEGO Movie are swept away. To save their friends, Batman, Gandalf and Wyldstyle bravely jump into the vortex and quickly find themselves fighting to save all of LEGO humanity. Let creativity be the guide to a building and gaming adventure - journey through unexpected worlds and team-up with unlikely allies on the quest to defeat the evil Lord Vortech. Play with different from different worlds together in one LEGO videogame, and use each other's vehicles and gadgets in a way never before possible. LEGO Bad Cop driving the DeLorean Time Machine. Why not?! The LEGO Ninja go Masters of Spinjitsu fighting alongside Wonder Woman...yes, please! Get ready to break the rules, because the only rule with LEGO Dimensions is that there are no rules.The LEGO DIMENSIONS Starter Pack has everything you need to set out on epic mash-up adventures filled with iconic worlds and unlikely allies as you’ve never seen them before. Build the minifigure heroes and fire-up the game to start the experience, then follow the in-game build instructions to assemble the loose bricks into the LEGO Gateway, and place the structure on the LEGO Toy Pad. There’s a whole multiverse of puzzles to solve, and challenges and enemies to face, and when you’re ready for more, collect level, team & fun packs to expand your collection. Use whatever minifigure with whichever vehicle or gadget – go ahead… break the rules!


Release date: September 27, 2015


Pricing: The strikethrough price is the List Price. Savings represents a discount off the List Price.


Product Dimensions: 3.1 x 11.5 x 15.2 inches; 2.4 Pounds


Binding: Video Game


Rated: Everyone 10+


Item model number: 1000534189


Is Discontinued By Manufacturer: No


Item Weight: 2.4 pounds


Manufacturer: Warner Bros


Date First Available: November 11, 2014


Frequently asked questions

If you place your order now, the estimated arrival date for this product is: Monday, May 27

Yes, absolutely! You may return this product for a full refund within 30 days of receiving it.

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Top Amazon Reviews


  • Pros outweigh the cons for our family
Pros and Cons Pros *Lego games are always fun. I do not understand why it is so fun to break things in the Lego world, but it is! *You are not stuck playing one game world. You can enter multiple different worlds and it's like you are playing a different Lego game. *You can play as different characters in the same world. *You can be one character and use a different characters vehicle. *You get to build actual Lego pieces. *You collect many different Lego characters because of this game. Fun for kids to have when they are playing with real Legos, unless you don't want to lose them. :) You can with 2 people. And the 2nd person isn't stuck following the first person around either. You can both be off exploring different parts of the game. *Story mode takes you through all the different worlds and gives you a taste of each one in a different way. Then when you get additional characters you can enter those worlds in free play and do even more. *This starter pack comes with 3 characters which gets you into 3 of the worlds plus one car. *You can upgrade your character vehicles. When you do you can also follow the directions and make the actual lego car look like the upgrade in the game. Cons *You have to buy additional packs/characters to have access to different worlds and to complete worlds. *The Lego Dimension game pad is not wireless so you can only be as far away from the tv as the cord will let you. And you are using the game pad regularly throughout the game moving your characters around on it at different points in the game and bringing in the characters vehicles so it has to be close to where to are sitting. *As you collect the many different characters to play the game you now have to have proper storage for the pieces. You build so many characters that they all need to have a place to be kept. *Each character and car comes with a Toy Tag that allows the pad to read that you are using that character. The chip is in the tag not the Lego pieces that become your character. that you attach to the bottom of the piece when you have finished building it. You can play with the tags only I suppose, as that is what the game pad reads, but it's more fun to see your character actually sitting there. *If you lose the Toy Tag you cannot play that character anymore, so don't lose the tags! *One person has to play with the Wii U game controller and play watching the little screen while the other person can play with a regular wii remote on the television. *The additional character packs are ridiculously expensive. I think I have covered all the things I think matter. Overall this is a fun game. My family loves just about anything Lego. It was worth it to us to get. To us the Pros out weigh the Cons. We have collected a few game expansion packs which has been fun. Hopefully they will lower the prices soon as the new holiday season approaches. This starter kit is already less than what I paid for it last year. Even if you never get all the different characters there are still hours and hours of fun game play that makes it worth adding to your Lego collection. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on August 15, 2016 by Bella

  • A very expensive and buggy game that still manages to charm
The concept of taking various licensed LEGO properties and throwing them together is great. Some of the properties, like Portal and Doctor Who, have been treated with evident love by the game designers. The controls are less convoluted than some recent LEGO games (LEGO The Hobbit was especially overloaded). But for all the fun in the idea, there's some big negatives. First of all, there's the cost. The entry cost is $99, and that just lets you play part of the game. If you want to get all of the gold bricks and other extras, you're going to need to by expansion sets—and a lot of them. In previous LEGO games, you unlocked characters by finding character tokens; in Dimensions, you unlock characters by buying real-world packs with real money. Even if you don't want to collect all the characters, but you just want to access all the hidden areas, Dimensions will cost you several hundred dollars. Many things are hidden behind things that require one specific expansion character to unlock. While the various packs aren't priced particularly high compared to non-game LEGO building sets with similar parts counts, the fact that you will need so many sets just to get 100% on the basic storyline means that this game requires a substantial financial investment. The game's story mode is short compared to recent LEGO games, although the "adventure worlds" make up for that somewhat. Likewise, the "level packs" that add new story levels are very brief. As for the controls, TT has traded complex menus on-screen for the toy pad. In many places, you need to use the pad and your characters as controls, moving them to different slots on the pad. That adds a new kind of control complexity. You can't just sit down and play the game; you need to have your toy pad within reach. It needs to be on a non-metallic surface, away from any sources of RF interference. It needs to be within reach of your console; it uses a long USB cord to connect. It needs to be on a relatively level, stable surface. And you'll need to have room nearby for your collection of characters and vehicles so you can swap them in and out. The need to constantly shift attention to the toy pad draws you out of the game, especially when you find you need to remove characters from play to make room to swap others from section to section. Like the Wii U's second-screen, it's an idea that sounds good in the abstract but isn't very fun in reality. (At least in the 1.02 patch, some character abilities can be activated with a button press instead of requiring toy pad movement.) The game also suffers from TT Games' long-standing LEGO game-engine bugs. After a decade of LEGO games, TT still hasn't fixed problems like characters getting stuck in places with no way out, or the game occasionally locking up for no apparent reason. (The Doctor Who level pack has a nasty bug where having the artifact-detector red brick enabled causes the game to crash reliably on multiple platforms, making the level unplayable until you disable the brick.) It also adds some new glitches, such as places where your character can fall through the world and die in the offstage area that you should never see... and then respawn offstage right above where you died, creating an infinite loop of falling, dying (and losing studs), and respawning that you can't escape without quitting the game (and losing progress). For a game that will cost several hundred dollars to complete, there's no excuse for not delivering a stable game without ancient bugs. It can be done—the Wii U-only LEGO City Undercover was virtually free of the typical TT Games LEGO bugs—but it wasn't done for Dimensions. If the game were free of these long-standing bugs—heck, if it were even free of bugs that should have been caught with minimal pre-release playtesting—it would be a four-star game. As it is, only the charm of the writing and the concept keep it from being a two-star game. The various properties in Dimensions receive varying amounts of care. For example, the starter set characters all have fairly extensive dialogue from the original actors. The Doctor Who, Portal, and LEGO Movie characters also receive extensive voice acting from the original actors, including minor characters. The Lord of the Rings characters receive the same over-used movie sound bites as the standalone games, which are sometimes even appropriate to the situation. The Ghostbusters levels available so far seem to rely exclusively on movie sound clips. The Simpsons properties are missing dialogue for many of the characters. If you have a lot of disposable income and a high tolerance for replaying levels due to game-ending glitches, LEGO Dimensions has a lot of fun in the way it lampoons its subjects and mashes them together. If spending $300 to $800 to play a buggy LEGO game doesn't appeal to you, you might want to skip it and just watch gameplay clips on YouTube. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on November 5, 2015 by Robert Levandowski Jr.

  • Kids love it
Good game. Kids love it! Needs more instruction.
Reviewed in the United States on July 18, 2022 by Robin Gregory

  • Substantial Content for a (Now) Reasonable Cost
LEGO Dimensions was discontinued a few years ago, but the download servers are still active in 2021. This means you can buy the game and any or all of the LEGO sets from third-party providers and enjoy the game. Originally the starter pack was $100 so finding it for $25ish now is a good deal. The starter pack includes the main story of the game and is an enjoyable romp through various entertainment properties. The toypad is a but gimmicky but it works. The story and voice acting is quality, the game is fun even for adults and the difficulty is forgiving (you can't lose), and the physical LEGOs included are high quality. If you're looking for the extra content after the starter pack, I recommend the story pack (6 levels each), however the level packs (1 level each) and fun packs (0 level each) aren't really worth the cash unless you can get them hella cheap or are a collector. The main story here is the best, regardless. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on June 14, 2021 by Matador

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