Best Of
10 Best LEGO Games in 2025

LEGO games are no longer just about smashing stuff anymore, but blending unique gameplay, sharp visuals, and some deep narratives. From licensed universes to original adventures, LEGO has leveled up. Not every LEGO title hits the same. The best ones are chaotic, playful and amazingly polished. Co-op is a must, and so is a great sense of humor. You want smooth camera work, satisfying sound effects, and gameplay that keeps things fresh without straying too far from the franchise’s heart of imagination. If you prefer chaotic co-op madness, clever puzzle solving, or heartfelt emotional storytelling, there is something for every brickhead. Here’s the ultimate list of LEGO games.
10. LEGO Bricktales

LEGO Bricktales is a physics-based puzzle game that’s all about how you build, not just what you build. You’re dropped into tiny diorama-style biomes, jungles, deserts, cities, and tasked with rebuilding parts of the world one piece at a time. The most fun is in the trial and error, like will your bridge actually hold weight or will it crumble under your character? It’s relaxing but also challenging and kind of hilarious when it fails. Far apart from the LEGO games full of action, Bricktales rewards patience and creativity. It plays especially well on PC and Switch thanks to its point-and-click build system.
9. LEGO Marvel Super Heroes: Remastered

With sharper textures, faster loading times, and extra smooth combat, LEGO Marvel Super Heros, one of the best-selling LEGO releases, is back and even better. You’ve got over 150 characters to unlock, from Iron Man to Squirrel Girl, and each comes with wild powers and voice lines. The open-world New York is still a blast to explore, full of secrets and side missions. Combat is classic mashing of buttons, with some surprisingly decent flying mechanics. For Marvel fans or newcomers, this is the most stacked LEGO superhero game on the market.
8. LEGO Brawls

Think of it as Super Smash Bros., but made entirely from LEGO sets. The game lets you build your own fighter, from cowboy ninjas to space knights that wield pizza, and drop into frantic battles that will have you scrolling on the sides. It’s fast, goofy, and surprisingly deep once you learn the map tricks. Gameplay is 4v4 chaos with power-ups, traps, and stage hazards galore. Whether on console or mobile, sessions are short and addictive. Customization is the star here. If you want to fight as a banana robot with a flaming sword, you absolutely can.
7. LEGO City Undercover

LEGO City Undercover is a cult classic for a reason. You play as undercover cop Chase McCain, chasing crooks across a sprawling LEGO metropolis. It’s GTA-lite, but it is kid-friendly, with puns instead of profanity. Driving is smooth, platforming is decent, and the open-world exploration makes it stand out. Collectibles are everywhere, and side quests are actually fun rather than filler. It runs better on newer platforms, with co-op support and sharper visuals, thanks to its update. On top of that, it’s still one of the funniest LEGO games ever made.
6. LEGO Fortnite

When LEGO teamed up with Fortnite, nobody expected this much charm. Instead of battle royale chaos, LEGO Fortnite leans into survival and crafting. You mine bricks, build villages, fend off skeletons, and explore cartoonish terrain with friends. It’s like LEGO Minecraft, but snappier and with Fortnite’s smooth controls. The world feels alive, and every build project feels earned. Plus, you can play it on mobile, console, or PC, and your stuff carries over. This one’s for players who love co-op crafting but want it in a blockier, quirkier universe.
5. LEGO Star Wars: The Skywalker Saga

Nine films, one massive LEGO adventure. The Skywalker Saga is a re-imagination of all Star Wars stories. It is built with modern gameplay, super clean graphics, and fully voiced characters. Each open-world zone is filled with missions, collectibles, and uncanny side jokes. Combat acquired a big upgrade. Tight blaster battles, smoother lightsaber combos, and smarter enemies. This is LEGO on a blockbuster scale. If you’re even slightly a Star Wars fan, it’s a must-play.
4. LEGO Horizon Adventures

So picture Horizon Zero Dawn, but in LEGO. It’s real. It’s awesome. It’s LEGO Horizon Adventures. Aloy is now a brickified hunter fighting mechanical beasts in a beautifully stylized LEGO world. It maintains the charm of the original game while wrapping it in humor, color, and co-op fun. You can rebuild machines, pull off slick dodges, and also customize weapons, all while exploring post-apocalyptic forests made of plastic. It’s also great for families without being boring. Additionally, the Tallneck is made entirely of snapping LEGO bricks. Enough said.
3. LEGO Builder’s Journey

This is the calmest LEGO game on this list, and that happens to be its power. Builder’s Journey ditches combat and franchises for a quiet, meditative story told through bricks. Solving one screen at a time, you guide a character through minimalist puzzles. With soft lighting and realistic brick textures, the visuals on LEGO Builder’s Journey are incredibly detailed. It runs like a dream on mobile, Switch, and PC. This one is short, but it sticks with you. It is one of the best games that are perfect for winding down after some intense titles.
2. LEGO Worlds

LEGO’s sandbox game got a transformation in 2025, with smoother controls, better menus, and tons of new biomes to explore. You can build castles, crash spaceships, or terraform deserts, all while riding a dragon or flying a jet. LEGO Worlds’ multiplayer works better now, and the building tools are more user-friendly. Plus, the visual polish means everything, from brick waterfalls to glowing lava, is even more satisfying to look at. This is LEGO’s answer to Minecraft, and it finally feels complete.
1. LEGO Voyagers

Let’s be honest, LEGO Voyagers might just be the most beautiful LEGO game ever made. You play as two tiny bricks exploring surreal, fully LEGO-built worlds to help a stranded spaceship get back home. There’s no talking, just emotional gestures and ambient music that somehow tells a story without a single word. The gameplay is all about cooperation and clever solving of puzzles. Whether you’re building a raft or climbing a space station, every move feels meaningful. It’s set to launch later this year, and trust, this is the indie-feeling LEGO title we didn’t know we needed.













