LEGO Harry Potter: Years 1-4 Message Board older than one year ago

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LEGO Harry Potter Preview
xbox360.ign.com posted by IGN Jun 02 2010 23:50 GMT
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The boy who lived... in LEGO form.
Lego Harry Potter trailer shows the return of 'Mort
joystiq.com posted by Joystiq May 27 2010 23:30 GMT
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A brief aside: The scaly antagonist from the Harry Potter series would be a whole lot less intimidating if everyone just shortened his name to Mort, wouldn't he? That's not a name that inspires much fear, even when prefaced with "The Nefarious Dark Lord of All-Wizardkind."

Check out the video above to see a brief vignette of clips from the fourth and final school year featured in Lego Harry Potter, which covers the events of Goblet of Fire. You know, the one with the Tri-Wizard Tournament, and Mad-Eye Moody, and all the thinly veiled lessons about the frightening changes puberty can visit upon teenagers. Yeah, that one.
LEGO Harry Potter DS Screens
media.ds.ign.com posted by IGN May 18 2010 20:47 GMT
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Put together the pieces of the Hogwarts puzzle in this latest LEGO adventure.
Harry Potter Magically Renames Classic Video Game Cheat
kotaku.com posted by Kotaku May 05 2010 22:20 GMT
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#ds Many video games have had a "big head mode." But who calls it "big head mode"? Not Harry Potter. In his next game, he inflates craniums with a spell called "Engorgio Skullus!" More »
LEGO: Harry Potter Years 1 - 4 Hands on, Feet Up
kotaku.com posted by Kotaku May 03 2010 19:00 GMT
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#impressions On its surface, LEGO Harry Potter may look an awful lot like LEGO Batman, LEGO Indiana Jones and LEGO Star Wars, but dig down a little past those colorful those bricks and you'll discover some major shifts in the way the game looks and behaves. More »
LEGO Harry Potter Collector's Edition magically increases the price by $20
gamestop.com posted by Joystiq Apr 21 2010 05:00 GMT
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A listing on Gamestop.com has revealed a Collector's Edition release for the PS3, Xbox 360 and Wii versions of LEGO Harry Potter: Years 1-4. The package includes the game disc (yes!) as well as behind-the-scenese featurettes about both the game and the Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows movie, plus a set of four "House Crest LEGO magnets." In addition, the Xbox 360 version of the game will include an exclusive Avatar item.

The price for this bundle? $70, fully $20 over the cost of the standard edition. For our $20, we'd need substantially more LEGOs. Even if those House Crests are functional, interlocking LEGOs, we can't build anything out of four of them.
Lego Harry Potter 'Behind the Scenes' video shows us around Blockwarts ... er, Hogwarts
joystiq.com posted by Joystiq Apr 16 2010 10:00 GMT
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Are you ready to explore the "largest, most detailed Hogwarts" that's ever been created in a game world? We're not certain that we are either, but TT Games certainly has high hopes that we'll get to that point before LEGO Harry Potter's delayed June release window arrives.

The latest "Behind the Scenes" video (seen above) has employees from the UK-based developer talking all sorts of yang about the enormous, immersive world that they've built (primarily out of LEGOs, as you might imagine). And though we might argue that we're not exactly looking for "immersive experiences" from our LEGO-based titles, well, it's pretty cute watching little LEGO Harry in action. Even "He Who Must Not Be Named" is kinda adorable with a cylinder head -- how could we resist?!
Hands-on: Lego Harry Potter, Years 1-4
joystiq.com posted by Joystiq Apr 08 2010 16:00 GMT
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While Lego Batman and Lego Rock Band have tempted me, I've always stuck with the regular versions of those games rather than diving into any block-based variations. But nevertheless, I sat down to check out TT Games' latest Lego outing, Lego Harry Potter: Years 1-4, with an open mind -- I have read and liked the Harry Potter books, and seen and enjoyed most of the movies. Maybe actually seeing Lego Hogwarts in action would win me over.
LEGO Harry Potter: Years 1-4 Screens
media.xbox360.ign.com posted by IGN Apr 06 2010 18:44 GMT
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Relive Harry's Hogwarts' adventures in LEGO form.
UK Q&A: LEGO Harry Potter: Years 1-4
starwars.lego.com posted by PlayStation Blog Apr 06 2010 12:10 GMT
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I didn’t think it was possible to make a game as collaboratively geektastic as LEGO Star Wars. But when it comes to the Reese’s Peanut Butter Cup-style “two great things that taste great together,” I think that LEGO + Harry Potter is right up there. With LEGO Harry Potter: Years 1-4 casting a spell on PS3 and PSP this Spring, PlayStation.Blog EU’s Jem Alexander met up with Traveller’s Tales‘ Jonathan Smith to find out more about the games. Y’know, cos SCEE offices are pretty close by the Ministry of Magic.

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Jem Alexander: How does Lego Harry Potter differ from previous Lego games?

Jonathan Smith: With every new game we make we try to raise the bar and there are lots of technical innovations in Lego Harry Potter. The new layer of physics makes the world more realistic and enable us to build with Lego using magic in a way you’ve never been able to do before. And taking advantage of this wonderful setting of Hogwarts and the magical characters within it, we can use magic to create a new kind of lego gameplay as well, with characters that learn new spells over a long period of time, so that they’re always progressing over what is a very sizeable adventure and learning new things every step of the way.

Jem: How has game progression in particular changed in this Lego game?

Jonathan: So what’s radically and completely new in Lego Harry Potter from what we’ve done before is the effect that having Hogwarts as a massive explorable environment has on the game progression and the game structure. When you first start as a new student in Hogwarts, finding your way to your first lesson you’ll be pretty well directed by the teaches and the design of the environment to find your way, but as you play and progress further through the story, with each new spell you’ll gain access to new areas and trigger new story events that move on through the plot. So you’ll find more and more of Hogwarts accessible to you as a player, switching between different characters, until it becomes a really huge, immersive, explorable, open environment — to which you’ll return between story events to discover more secrets and learn more things.

Jem: So why did you choose to focus on the first four books?

Jonathan: We wanted to start at the beginning of the Harry Potter story with year 1 and we wanted to create a game that was a really substantial adventure. The end of the Triwizard Tournament at the end of The Goblet Of Fire is a really nice climax. Over those four years you get a real sense of development from a novice to becoming a very powerful wizard. It’s a period of time that’s rewarding to play through and get to the end of.

Jem: Would you say the game is based more on the books or the films, or a mixture of both?

Jonathan: Everything in the world of Harry Potter comes from the books. That’s where it was invented and where it has the greatest detail. We draw, where we can, upon the wonderfully vivid evocation of the story as represented by the film makers and you’ll see that in the representation of the characters and some of the action scenes.

Jem: How much creative freedom were you given when creating objects, characters or environments for the Harry Potter Universe?

Jonathan: Everything that’s in Lego Harry Potter has to be fitting for the world of Harry Potter and the world of Lego Harry Potter is very accommodating of surprising objects. So, you’ll find tractors and washing machines and trampolines and all the surprising, fun, Lego things you’d expect to find in a Lego game — and yet at the same time it will still be perfectly fitting for the world of Harry Potter.

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Jem: How have you dealt with character progression in the game? Do they get older and more powerful?

Jonathan: All the students, as you progress through the game, will learn new, more powerful spells.

Jem: Are there any plans to incorporate Move functionality?

Jonathan: No. Because we’re coming out before the Move is releasing.

Jem: How much support have you had from JK Rowling and the people behind the films?

Jonathan: We’ve had tremendous support JK Rowling and all the team at Warner Bros who are responsible for the upkeep of the world of Harry Potter. Everyone appreciates that what Lego brings to Harry Potter is unique and I think everyone has come to trust the respect and love that everyone on the team has for the source material and that wonderful world that was created.

Jem: How much sidequest / secret content will there be in the game?

Jonathan: It’s a big game compared to other Lego games. The balance of directed, plot-orientated level action to fool-around bonus stuff is not dissimilar to previous games, but there is probably more of it because it’s a bigger game.

Jem: How do the PSP and PS3 games differ?

Jonathan: The PSP version of the game has a greater focus on adventure and questing. The PS3 version has a greater focus on action.

Jem: How do you feel about the idea that Lego Harry Potter will be the first exposure to the series for some people?

Jonathan: We aspire to be the perfect introduction for new gamers and people who may not be intimately knowledgable about Harry Potter already. Lego always gives people a way into new worlds of imagination and we feel very proud to be able to do that.

Thanks, Jem! Little known fact: on the way to SCEE HQ, you walk right past what I’m convinced is the basis for Diagon Alley. Someplace called “Carnaby Street.” Check it out if you’re ever round that way.

LEGO Harry Potter trailer is Sirius business
joystiq.com posted by Joystiq Mar 30 2010 00:03 GMT
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Kids these days, they're big into this Harry Potter dude. Whether it's the books or the movies, the kids want to know what's going down at the Hogwart's, whereas we were more concerned with what was going down at the F.A.O. Schwartz in our younger years. That keyboard from Big? We were all about it.

That's why the above trailer is so hard to understand for us. Of course, the classic Traveler's Tales stamp of charismatic plastic dudes and dudettes is there and easily recognizable, but we're just not up on that Potter tip. We lack the info. Good thing LEGO Harry Potter is a crash course on the up-and-coming wizard's first four years at that crazy school, right?
Year Three In the Life of LEGO Harry Potter
kotaku.com posted by Kotaku Mar 29 2010 18:30 GMT
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#clips I am proud to admit that I await the arrival of LEGO Harry Potter: Years 1-4 with giddy anticipation. More »
Lego Harry Potter Year 3 Trailer
media.ps3.ign.com posted by IGN Mar 27 2010 00:37 GMT
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Relive Harry Potter's early adventures lego style.
LEGO Harry Potter: Years 1-4 Video
media.xbox360.ign.com posted by IGN Mar 19 2010 00:42 GMT
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This video gives fans a sneak peek at the fun-filled humor that awaits players later this year!
Conjuring Up Fun Featurette
posted by GameTrailers Feb 19 2010 20:59 GMT
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One of the World's best known characters of all time gets a brand new LEGO adaptation with new features!
Lego Harry Potter building a magical May release
joystiq.com posted by Joystiq Feb 01 2010 21:29 GMT
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The boy who lived will make his brick-tacular debut when Lego Harry Potter: Years 1-4 rides a broomstick to every major gaming platform this May. It'll be interesting to see if the retail magic is there with the Hogwarts pupil, as it was for other mega-franchises like Star Wars, Indiana Jones and Batman. Lego Harry Potter will apply the standard TT Games treatment to the series, dividing the first four movies (and rectangular objects known as books) into levels. If the idea of playing Quidditch with a flying plastic cube interests you, congratulations! You're the target audience for this game. Speaking of which, where's our Lego Dune?
Year Two Trailer
posted by GameTrailers Feb 01 2010 20:27 GMT
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The kids of Hogwarts endure their second year in the magical LEGO video game adaptation.