The guide to LEGO: The Lord of the Rings contains a complete solution richly illustrated with screenshots, as well as aids you in finding all the secret collectibles and complete the game in 100%.
Sep 29, 2015 Our 100% Lego Dimensions walkthrough will guide you through the beginning to ending moments of gameplay with strategy tips for this toys-to-life action-adventure game on the PS4, PS3, Xbox One, Xbox 360 & Wii U. Let’s start the Lego Dimensions walkthrough with a story introduction video! When a new threat emerges, heroes from different worlds.
Guide contains:
- A precise, illustrated walkthrough of the main story missions;
- Locations of all the minikits which you can come across during the gameplay;
- Maps of all locations with the location of characters, mithril and red bricks;
- A walkthrough of the side missions available in Middle-earth;
- A list of characters and treasures available in the game.
Slawomir 'Asmodeusz' Michniewski
Translated to English by Jakub 'cilgan' Lasota
About LEGO The Lord of the Rings Game Guide & Walkthrough
Author : Slawomir 'Asmodeusz' Michniewski for gamepressure.com
Translator : Jakub 'Cilgan' Lasota
last update : May 5, 2016
Guide contains : 78 pages, 638 images.
Use the comments below to submit your updates and corrections to this guide.
Hot Topics of LEGO The Lord of the Rings Game Guide & Walkthrough
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LEGO The Lord of the Rings Video Game
- genre: Action
- developer: Traveller's Tales
- publisher: Warner Bros Interactive Entertainment
- platform: PC, XBOX360, PS3, Wii
- rated: PEGI: Age 7+ / ESRB: Everyone 10+
LEGO The Lord of the Rings is based on The Lord of the Rings motion picture trilogy and follows the original storylines of The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring, The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers, and The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King. Now the entire family can team up in pairs as adorable LEGO The Lord the Rings minifigures to experience countless dangers, solve riddles and battle formidable foes on their journey to Mount Doom.
LEGO The Lord of the Rings takes players along on the adventures of Frodo Baggins and his unlikely fellowship as they set out on a perilous journey to destroy The One Ring and save Middle-earth. Kids, tweens, teens and parents can traverse the Misty Mountains, explore the Mines of Moria, knock on the Black Gate of Mordor, and partake in epic battles with Orcs, Uruk-hai, the Balrog and other fearsome foes while harnessing the humour and imagination of LEGO gameplay to solve puzzles and explore Middle-earth. Players will take on the form of their favourite members of the fellowship – Frodo the Hobbit, Aragorn the Ranger, Gandalf the Wizard, Legolas the Elf, Gimli the Dwarf, Boromir a Man of Gondor, and Frodo’s Hobbit friends Sam, Merry and Pippin – as they relive the most momentous events from the films.
LEGO The Lord of the Rings takes players along on the adventures of Frodo Baggins and his unlikely fellowship as they set out on a perilous journey to destroy The One Ring and save Middle-earth. Kids, tweens, teens and parents can traverse the Misty Mountains, explore the Mines of Moria, knock on the Black Gate of Mordor, and partake in epic battles with Orcs, Uruk-hai, the Balrog and other fearsome foes while harnessing the humour and imagination of LEGO gameplay to solve puzzles and explore Middle-earth. Players will take on the form of their favourite members of the fellowship – Frodo the Hobbit, Aragorn the Ranger, Gandalf the Wizard, Legolas the Elf, Gimli the Dwarf, Boromir a Man of Gondor, and Frodo’s Hobbit friends Sam, Merry and Pippin – as they relive the most momentous events from the films.
- Traveller's Tales - Developer Website.
- Warner Bros Interactive Entertainment - Publisher Website.
- LEGO The Lord of the Rings - Official Website.
LEGO The Lord of the Rings PC version System Requirements
Recommended: Quad Core 2.7 GHz, 1 GB RAM (2 GB RAM - Vista/7), graphic card 512 MB (GeForce 9800 GTX or better), 8 GB HDD, Windows XP(SP3)/Vista/7
(Written by )In this Brick Breakdown series I review official LEGO sets, from the perspective of looking at interesting building techniques we can all learn from. Today we will be looking at the. You can check out the previously discussed LEGO building techniques found in official LEGO sets at the end of this article. ?When I first heard about the #79008 LEGO Lord of the Rings Pirate Ship Ambush set it took me a moment to remember where a pirate ship fit into the story of the Lord of the Rings. Then I recalled the ghosts and Peter Jackson’s cameo in the movies and it all came back to me. Frankly, there are very few scenes the ship appears in, especially when you do a marathon of watching all the movies in their extended editions.
At any rate, LEGO Lord of the Rings gets a pirate ship in its line-up; giving a fantastic addition to the series, while still leaving plenty of options open for future sets. Now let’s get to the interesting LEGO techniques used in Pirate Ship Ambush set!➡ DECEPTIVE LEGO SLOPESIt’s pretty obvious that a ship will need some very “un-square” elements to create a realistic design. That is why LEGO made the specialized hull pieces for the base of its ship. However, when the front and back sections of the hull need to be raised, LEGO designers don’t always use the specialized elements. The reason for this is because it allows for more opportunities to create small distinctions from ship to ship.
This however also presents a new problem; many of the LEGO pieces that could potentially work are not sloped exactly to fit a ship. Therefore, you need to engage in a bit of deceptive slope-work.Essentially, you figure out what is the most important angle for the parts to be in to make the ship look good, and that becomes the primary characteristic you design around.
In the LEGO Lord of the Rings Pirate Ship Ambush set the front and back sections of the ship use inverted slopes to point to the ends of the ship, leaving a very odd squareness to the sides. This is where knowing how to work with LEGO slopes comes in handy.One way to use this LEGO technique is to add context around the imperfect slopes. In this case, LEGO designers sandwiched the slopes in between some highly specialized elements, then masked what they could to hide the imperfections.
Finally, they distract the eyes with all the various detail-work; wings, blades, shields all vying for your attention, while taking your eyes away from vaguely shaped bottom. Taken to this extreme, they make an awkward design look completely appropriate.➡ UNDERSTANDING YOUR LEGO SHIPMaking a LEGO ship looks simple at first; have a boat-bottom, rudder, steering, and a mast with a sail and you’re done, right? Well, that can work, but it won’t look as impressive as the ship of someone who has done their homework. Let’s look at the finer details of the LEGO Lord of the Rings Pirate Ship to get an idea of what I’m talking about. For starters, this is a pirate-ship. However, it is not a ship from the golden era of real pirates, rather it is from a fantasy-realm where technology is not as advanced.
Hence the lack of cannons for example. However it does have some pirate-ish details; it has a ram on the front made for attacking other ships. It also has low side-walls, which is a common modification that pirates make to aid in boarding.
It’s highly armored with very little reserved for trade or passengers. And it looks like it is built for speed. How can we tell? Well, it has a very shallow hull and the sails have no rigging – all indicating a smaller, lighter ship.
But there are three sails; more than a ship this size would have, giving it speed. If compared to a 1700’s real pirate ship, this would probably be classified as a modified pinnace – a longship that was made for shallow waters and maneuverability. It really could not handle long voyages or go in deep waters.Remember how I mentioned it was important that The LEGO Lord of the Rings Pirate Ship is a fantasy throw-back? It makes sense that their ship design is not built for long ship trips since the technology would not be as readily affordable. Also, the mercenaries this ship was taken from were said to primarily engage in coastal raids which fits the boat’s design. Another signature feature of this ship is the triangular sails.
Most pirate ships utilize a square sail for greater hauling power. Even modern sail-boats use two triangular sails connected to a single mast. This ship has three different masts which indicate a fairly inefficient design – again indicating a cruder technology.➡ APPLYING WHAT YOU LEARNIt is often the case that LEGO does not have the exact piece you need when it comes to specific angles. The solution for this tends to come from creative applications of various building techniques. Like utilizing slopes for their most important angle then deceive the viewer’s eye from the imperfections.As for LEGO ships, every little detail paints a distinct characteristic of how that ship is used. A lot of guns may indicate a warship or pirate ship based on their number.
Of course that many guns also represent a heavier ship which would require more sails. This in turn will suggest the need for certain amounts of rigging and so on.
The bottom line is that a good LEGO ship could be slapped together real quick, but a great LEGO ship will require some planning and adding logical and realistic details.So what do you think? How do you like the LEGO building techniques in the LEGO Lord of the Rings Pirate Ship Ambush set?
Do you like LEGO ships? Have you experimented with making your own? Did you pay attention to providing realistic details?
Feel free to share your own experiences, tips or ask questions in the comment section below! ?And you might also like to check out the other reviews in this series:. No fear about more Breakdowns. The Admin is buried in them.;DAs for the lack of a Captain’s Cabin, I know what you mean.
You’d think given its size compared to other ships it would. However that is one reason why I talked about the details of ship building. Given the class of this ship, it is not likely to have a Captain’s cabin. Being a coastal raider class it shows that the Captain has not reached the level of success yet.Of course if your shelling out this kind of money on a single set I think I’d prefer a bigger ship. Since this ship was built based on the license they went away from the large ship design and made it a slaver ship.Granted you could redesign the prison into a Captain’s cabin fairly easily.
My biggest complaint though is the masts. If you have pretty much any other LEGO ship, the masts feel poorly constructed.Though I will say, boy did they put the details in this ship. Sometimes it feels more decorative than functional. I think it gives a nice change of tempo to the various LotR sets.It’s just sad that this and the Duplo ship are the only ships currently in LEGO’s line up.