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LEGO® Bricktales

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£24.99 / $29.99 Meta Quest 2/3/Pro Mixed Reality Mode Everyone

LEGO® Bricktales

Build LEGO structures brick-by-brick in VR to solve engineering puzzles across five diorama worlds. The definitive version of an acclaimed puzzle-adventure, with optional mixed reality mode on Quest 3.

Developer: ClockStone STUDIO
Publisher: Thunderful Publishing
Price: £24.99 / $29.99
Released: December 2023 (Quest)
8.2
/10
XR School Score
Recommended
The best brick-building experience in VR — spatial reasoning, creative engineering, and a family-friendly story that works brilliantly in MR
OpenCritic: 82 "Definitive version"
CGM 8/10 • Road to VR 8/10
Overview

LEGO Bricktales is a puzzle-adventure game originally released for PC and consoles in October 2022 by ClockStone STUDIO. The VR version arrived exclusively for Meta Quest 2, Quest 3, and Quest Pro in December 2023, redesigned from the ground up with full motion controls and an optional mixed reality passthrough mode. Multiple reviewers called the VR edition the definitive way to play the game.

The core idea is elegant: travel through five LEGO diorama worlds and solve engineering puzzles by building structures from a limited set of bricks. A bridge that actually holds weight. A crane that reaches the right spot. A gyrocopter that flies. Each build requires trial and error, spatial thinking, and an understanding of basic structural principles — making it one of the few VR games that genuinely teaches engineering design thinking rather than just rewarding it.

Why VR Makes This Special On a flat screen, the LEGO dioramas are charming but distant. In VR, each world appears as a physical miniature stage sitting right in front of you — life-size bricks in your hands. On Quest 3 with colour passthrough, you can place the LEGO world on your actual coffee table and build with virtual bricks against your real environment. Siliconera called it "a game working better on a new platform than its original one." Road to VR said "brick-building in VR... is something anyone can do for hours on end."

The story is family-friendly: help your grandfather, an inventor, restore his amusement park using a mysterious alien device powered by Happiness Crystals. To earn them, you portal to five different LEGO worlds and solve problems for the inhabitants. The tone is gentle, humorous, and appropriate for all ages. Puzzles have a sandbox mode so children can explore freely after solving the structural challenge.

Five LEGO Worlds
🌿
Jungle
Help an archaeologist explore a lost temple. Build rope bridges and scaffolding across chasms to reach ancient ruins.
🏛
Desert City
Explore a bustling market city. Build market stands, water towers, and mechanical devices for the city's inhabitants.
🏪
Medieval Castle
Cure a kingdom of poisoned peasants. Build cranes, catapults, and transport mechanisms in a high-fantasy medieval setting.
🌍
Caribbean
Find a long-lost pirate vessel. Build boats, diving equipment, and navigational tools amid turquoise waters.
Grandfather's Amusement Park (Hub)
The central hub world connecting all five portals. As you earn Happiness Crystals, the amusement park gradually comes back to life around you.
Educational Value
Engineering Design Process in VR The building puzzles in LEGO Bricktales replicate the core engineering design loop in a playful context: identify the problem (a gap to bridge, a weight to lift), design a solution using available components, build it, test it, revise if it fails. This is the same process taught in Design Technology and STEM project work at KS3 and beyond. Unlike educational software that labels this process, LEGO Bricktales makes students live it naturally. The spatial reasoning demands — planning in three dimensions, understanding structural stability, managing a limited brick inventory — map directly to geometry and design thinking curricula.
Design Technology / STEM
8.5
Spatial Reasoning (Maths)
8.2
Creative Problem Solving
8.8
All ages / Family
9.5
Value for money
7.8
What Critics Say
CGMagazine8/10
"The definitive version of an already fun-to-play game. LEGO Bricktales on the Meta platform is truly mesmerising, and particularly impressive if you own the Quest 3 headset with its colour passthrough."
SiliconeraRecommended
"A perfect example of a game working better on a new platform than its original one. Getting to build on virtual tables in my lap or on my coffee table is far more intuitive and fun than on PS5."
Road to VRRecommended
"Brick-building in VR not only works, but is something anyone can do for hours on end — even in the face of a pretty kid-focused story. The diorama approach feels perfectly at home in VR."
Strengths and Limitations
Strengths
  • Brick-by-brick building with full motion controllers is genuinely satisfying
  • Mixed reality mode on Quest 3 places LEGO world in your real room
  • OpenCritic 82; multiple reviewers call it the definitive version
  • Five varied diorama worlds with different themes and build types
  • Teaches engineering design thinking naturally through play
  • Sandbox mode per world for free building after solving
  • Appropriate for all ages; child-friendly story and tone
  • Works on Quest 2 (b&w passthrough), Quest 3 (colour), Quest Pro
Considerations
  • Paid: £24.99 / $29.99 — the most expensive game in this batch
  • Meta Quest only — not on SteamVR or PICO
  • Some reviewers noted occasionally vague building objectives
  • Story is very child-focused; older players may find it slight
  • No true free-build sandbox (only per-world post-puzzle)
£24.99
Meta Quest 2, 3 & Pro • MR mode on Quest 3
Get on Meta Quest →
Quick Facts
Developer
ClockStone STUDIO
Publisher
Thunderful Publishing
Price
£24.99 / $29.99
Platform
Meta Quest 2, 3, Pro only
Released
December 7, 2023
Critic Score
OpenCritic 82
Mixed Reality
Yes (colour on Quest 3, b&w on Quest 2)
Age Rating
Everyone
Original release
Oct 2022 (PC/console)
Verdict
The finest brick-building experience in VR, and arguably the best family-friendly puzzle game on Meta Quest. The combination of structured engineering challenges, five varied worlds, and the extraordinary mixed reality mode — which places a LEGO diorama in your actual living room — makes this both an entertainment and a genuine spatial reasoning and design thinking tool. At £24.99 it is the most expensive entry in this batch, but the quality is commensurately higher. For Design Technology, STEM, and any teacher looking for a premium VR puzzle experience all ages can engage with, this is highly recommended.