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Lego Voyagers review
Eurogamer's Lego Voyagers review, the co-op puzzle adventure game.
Like most kids before they had jobs (a paper round came some years later), we didn't have much money, and what we did have we wanted to spend on sweets, so we'd often walk miles to avoid getting a bus - we even had a squeaky metal trolley we'd wheel about to carry all our stuff as we ventured to the distant pitch-and-put or tennis courts. | Image credit: Eurogamer/Light Brick Studio The rocket, parts of which appear on Red and Blue's idyllic remote island home after a failed launch, is central to the pair's voyage through the world - finding where it's manufactured, fixing it up, and eventually much more. Sure, I admit to raising my voice when my son and I had different ideas of what "forward" meant while co-driving a vehicle, and my wife had to put headphones on when we took turns arguing over which of us had the more difficult job flying and landing a miniature space craft, but this is largely a game you move through rather than work through.
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