The first few planets you'll visit act as your tutorial, where NPCs give you instructions for items, structures, or basic puzzles, all while telling you how to use the tools you'll need to use to complete the quests. It's incredibly well stylised and makes every procedurally generated area look like it's been painstakingly crafted by hand from Lego, something that fans of both the toys and the games will no doubt appreciate. Lego Worlds draws on different aspects of the physical toys for inspiration, making the game feel more like a virtual creator than its predecessors, where every brick can be manipulated to the will of the player. The premise for Lego Worlds is simple: you explore a sandbox world to collect Gold Bricks, and these help fuel your spaceship so you can continue your journey and discover new worlds, the end goal of all of this being to become a Master Builder. Instead of a themed narrative to follow, we get to exercise our creative muscles and build and shape the world around us, and it seems blindingly obvious, to combine the sandbox genre with the world of Lego, when you stop to think about it. The Lego video game universe is an ever expanding one, and the latest venture from TT Games, Lego Worlds, lets us explore Lego planets in Lego Galaxies, providing a different flavour to what we've seen in previous Lego games.