![]() That last thing has a lot to do with how many bubbles you pick up, though. Doing so will lead to finding secrets, such as hidden areas, special dreamer orbs and unique costume pieces, while also helping you get to the gold level score. As players explore the several different worlds - which include a monkey filled forest, a futuristic space city, a soaring summit and a dark and mysterious dungeon - they’ll find that they’re offered the chance to fully explore each level. However, instead of featuring 2.5D stages, this particular entry offers full 3D platforming. The included platforming is very much a honed, polished and thoroughly enjoyable mixture of the best of LittleBigPlanet. For instance, the first area has a flower that you can jump into, and that flower will spit you into a hidden part of the third world (an under the sea motif), wherein you’ll find a couple of extra stages to complete. Sackboy: A Big Adventure is comprised of several different worlds, all of which have a good assortment of levels, including secret ones that can only be discovered by exploring the 3D world maps. It’s this space rocket which helps players move from one world to another, over the course of Sackboy‘s rather lengthy campaign.Īlthough Sackboy’s main goal obviously pertains to stopping Vex and rescuing his friends and neighbours, he’ll have to endure a lot before getting the chance to do so. He manages to hold on for dear life after grabbing the Topsy Turver schematics that Vex so carelessly dropped in the main plaza, and is then able to make his way to his trusty rocket ship before the worst occurs. Of course, that would be Sackboy, the familiar and beloved main protagonist of all six (I believe) LittleBigPlanet games. Vex’s plan is to replace the good, safe and happy dreams of Craftworld with uproar, which is another term for nightmares.Īll is not lost, however, as a singular being manages to escape the interstellar vacuum that Vex unleashes on the unsuspecting world. Once they’ve been sucked into the stratosphere, he puts them to work in his tedious, depressing and downright evil factory, as slaves for his nightmare machine, the Topsy Turver. Things are soon interrupted by a dark and Disney-esque villain named Vex, who steals and imprisons every single craft being. Sackboy: A Big Adventure begins in Craftworld, where the happy, fabric-based residents are going about their day-to-day lives. This may actually be the best LittleBigPlanet game yet. Here’s hoping it won’t be overlooked, because it’s a colourful, whimsical and memorable gem. Released as a cross-gen title, meaning that it’s playable on both PS4 and PS5, Sumo Sheffield’s Sackboy: A Big Adventure is one of the few exclusives factoring into the new console’s launch line-up. Six years after Sumo Digital’s middling LittleBigPlanet 3, the craft-based platformer is back for the start of a new generation. That particular hook would help propel the series into the upper stratosphere of gaming, fuelled by good sales and interest in sequels. ![]() At that time, the new IP was the talk of the industry, thanks to its colourful platforming and promise of a great creation suite, which would allow players to make their own levels. It’s hard to believe, but twelve years have passed since the first LittleBigPlanet game released onto PlayStation 3.
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