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Lego Star Wars II Sells 1.1 Million

LifesBlood writes "Lego Star Wars II has gone Platinum in under two weeks, reports TheForce.net. The title, showcasing the adventures from the original Star Wars Trilogy, has sold over 1.1 Million copies already." From the article: "Set in a tongue-in-cheek Star Wars galaxy, LEGO Star Wars II allows gamers to build and battle their way through the events of Star Wars: Episodes IV through VI. It has earned rave reviews from both consumer and trade press, largely because it is designed for the entire family."

7 of 70 comments (clear)

  1. Is it just me... by Rude+Turnip · · Score: 4, Funny

    or does anyone else find the picture of the Lego version of Leia on the game packaging mildly attractive?

    1. Re:Is it just me... by meringuoid · · Score: 4, Funny
      or does anyone else find the picture of the Lego version of Leia on the game packaging mildly attractive?

      You can get a Lego boxset of 'Jabba's Palace'.

      Leia in the gold bikini: hot. Leia in the gold bikini in Lego: deeply disturbing.

      --
      Real Daleks don't climb stairs - they level the building.
    2. Re:Is it just me... by Rude+Turnip · · Score: 4, Funny

      Sweet creeping zombie Jesus, I am really beginning to regret my post.

  2. Star Wars Essence by IflyRC · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Somehow, through digital representations of Legos they captured the feeling of Star Wars. They did a lot of things right unlike Sony Online Entertainment and Star Wars Galaxies. SOE continues to try to make the game into something it can't be - World of Warcraft. Games like this bring fun, adventure and nostalgia to new and old fans alike not to mention it opens up the market for small children.

    1. Re:Star Wars Essence by meringuoid · · Score: 5, Interesting
      Somehow, through digital representations of Legos they captured the feeling of Star Wars.

      Lego is the perfect medium for Star Wars.

      Consider why it is we remember Star Wars so favourably. Star Wars gave us a universe painted in broad, bold strokes, but with vast expanses of the unknown. We follow an innocent farmboy into a galactic war, leaving his narrow horizons to change the world, learning to use the Force to reconstruct reality itself... The film shows us the outlines of a magnificent world, with endless possibility. So much detail, implying so much more than we ever saw, and a mysterious backstory we never got to hear the whole of and had to speculate and build it for ourselves. For the eight-year-olds we were, this all adds up to the greatest movie ever.

      Now, what about Lego? Again, we were eight years old, and playing with this toy that comes with instructions for how to make this one plane or spaceship or whatever it might be... but has pictures of a few other things you might build with it instead. And of course you do. And in time it gets broken up and goes into the sack with the rest of the Lego and next thing you know it's something else entirely, something that's yours.

      To my mind, rebuilding my Lego as I wanted it, into something based on the original design but definitely my own, is the same impulse as building my own backstory to Star Wars - of how Darth Vader hunted down the Jedi, how Yoda and Obi-Wan managed to hide themselves and the children, of General Kenobi and Bail Organa and the Clone Wars, of how Anakin fell, of the long and proud history of the clan so famous for their command of the Force that they gained the title of Skywalker. And of course it's the same impulse as picking up a stick and waving it around going 'whoom... whoooooooom.... whooom!' It's taking what you're given and expanding upon it, making it your own. It's creativity.

      I might add that my own imagination of the untold stories of Star Wars did not involve midichlorians, or Gungans, or virgin births, or anyone going 'yippee' for any reason whatever. Which perhaps is why even Revenge of the Sith, which was actually pretty good, will never be as well loved. It was beautiful, sure, but it was like that one guy who glued his Lego together. There's just nothing there to have any fun with.

      --
      Real Daleks don't climb stairs - they level the building.
  3. Re:not that impressive by sprayNwipe · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Because, believe it or not, every person doesn't buy every SKU of the game. In fact, it'd be rare for someone to buy more than one SKU.

  4. Re:not that impressive by Wdomburg · · Score: 3, Informative

    There are DS titles that have sold 3 million now individually.

    And it's taken them months to reach those numbers; e.g. Animal Crossing has been out since last year, and New Super Mario Bros since May.

    FFIII for DS in Japan sold almost 600,000 copies in less than a week. How is this impressive?

    Total sales of FFIII have only hit 655,533 a month after release.