New Game from LightBrick Studio: Voyagers

4 years ago, LightBrick studio brought us LEGO Builders Journey. This game received a major update last week and continues to provide me with joy after all this time. (My review is following soon). Today at Summer Games Fest, the studio have revealed their second game: LEGO Voyagers. This multiplatform co-op adventure game is about friendship and play. When two friends make it their mission to rescue an abandoned spaceship, they embark on a journey beyond their wildest dreams, ultimately learning the value of being connected.

Today during Summer Game Fest, the LEGO Group, Light Brick Studio (LEGO® Builder’s Journey) and Annapurna Interactive announced LEGO® Voyagers, a creative co-op adventure game available later this year on PlayStation®5 (PS5™), PlayStation®4 (PS4™), Xbox Series X|S, Nintendo Switch™ and PC via Steam and Epic Games Store. LEGO Voyagers is a 2-player cooperative LEGO play experience where players of all ages embark on a journey full of platforming challenges and puzzles, all while playing as iconic LEGO bricks. Additionally, it will feature Friend’s Pass, allowing friends to play together using only one purchased copy of the game.

  •      Experience what it feels like to be a LEGO brick. Tumble, jump, snap together, and build your way through rich brick worlds.
  • Unravel a poetic, nonverbal narrative, set in beautiful brick-built environments, supported by an atmospheric soundtrack.
  • Cooperatively solve the game’s many challenges and discover how two bricks are better than one. Play locally on the same screen, or online.
  • Invite a friend to join your adventure for free with the Friend’s Pass. As long as one of you owns LEGO Voyagers, you can both play the full co-op experience together.

It reminds us that while playing and being creative is for all shapes and sizes, it’s always better when you share it with a friend.

LEGO Voyagers asks open questions about building friendships, sharing dreams, and giving space.

I’m really excited for this game. The nonverbal nature of the story telling, along with the potential for players to function as buildable elements.

One of the highlights of Light Brick Studio’s previous work is their rendering of LEGO elements, particularly on systems with advanced graphics cards. As such, they realistically reflect how LEGO Bricks handle light, shading, relative opacity, and even play wear.

The game will be available later this year, and you can be sure that I will bring you a review as soon as I can.

Are you as excited for this game as I am? Let us know in the comments below.

If you have enjoyed this post, please feel free to share it with your friends, families and communities. You can also keep up to date with us by following The Rambling Brick on our socials: FacebookThreads, Bluesky, Tumblr (or just sign up for our mailing list) and find some extra content on Instagram and TikTok.

We really value your feedback: please let us know what you think about the sets we review, and the articles we post. And if you wish to support the Rambling Brick, consider clicking on our affiliate links before going shopping at LEGO.com. The Rambling Brick receives a small commission, and it costs you nothing extra.

Until Next Time,

Play Well!

Leave a Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.