Lego City Undercover Map
Albatross Island: Use the teleporter on the beach to access the south yard. Find the path to the tower. Climb to the very top of the tower and then use the jet pack to reach the flag stand.2. Apollo Island: On the roof with the Helipad Super Build near the end of the free run course.3. Auburn: Start at the Auburn Bay Bridge. There is a support beam running from the very top of the bridge. You can go all the way to the top of the bridge but a short cut is to use the jet pack to jump onto the support at the very end where it ends at the pedestal.
Jump up on the free climb wall the get to the Super Chicken Glide. Glide over to a crane and make your way to the other end of the crane. Use the Super Jet Pack to get to the next crane.
The flag stand is on the other end of the crane.4. Auburn Bay Bridge: On top of the South Tower of the bridge. This at the very end of the Free Run.5. Blackwell Bridge: Climb the blue pole to the overhead street signs. Follow the planks and jump gaps to reach the flag stand.6. Bluebell National Park: On top of the dam.7.
2020-4-3 In this guide we show you where you can find all forty of the Lego City Undercover Red Bricks collectibles that are scattered throughout the game.
Bright Lights Plaza: Drill the block in front of the building to the west of the big circle. Climb up and go around to the teleporter. Teleport and climb to the roof. Climb the ladder to the flag stand.8. Cherry Tree Hills: On the top of the space needle.9. Crescent Park: Use the Jet Pack to jump on the ladder to the giant tree house.10. Downtown: Start at Promenade gardens and use the teleporter on the roof.
Slide down the tight rope then cross the bill board and jet pack across the gap to the roof above the LEGO sign. Age of wonders 2. Climb the roof and then the sign.
The room old sins curiosity room. Add the rod with a handle to the bell that’s missing one.21. Look at the label below the bells. There’s a small screw holding the panel in place.
Cross the sign and go across the tight rope to the tall glass building. Festival Square: On the roof of Mercy Hospital above the locked door. Use the long wall jump to get to the top.12. Fresco: At the very top of the spiral tower.13. Fort Meadows: On the roof of the gas station and dinner. Climb the billboards near the call in point.14. Heritage Bridge: On top of the west end of the bridge.
Pull down the grapple point to start the climb.15. Kings Court: On top of Jenny's Diner (one of the four buildings around the basketball court).16. Lady Liberty Island: At the feet of Lady Liberty. Climb the blue pole and slide down the rope to the pedestal. Go around the statue until you find the ladder.17. LEGO City Airport: At the south end of the terminal, take the crate from the alcove with the color swapper.
Place it on the green base plate and assemble the trampoline. Use the trampoline to jump up to the free climb wall. Use the launch pad and jump up to the roof. Jump 3 obstacles then climb the fence. Go straight until you come to the wall.
Turn right and walk past the three obstacles. Continue to the right then look to the left for a wall jump pad. Jump up the pad and back to the left.
Follow the obstacles around to the left. Get up a level and jump to the right using on the tops of the poles. Climb up the tower to conquer the district.18. Pagoda: Fly into the district and get out on the roof of the building with the Emergency Crash Mat. Use the super Jet Pack, Catapult and tight rope to get to the building with the flag stand. The building also contains the Red Brick for Super Smash Axe.19.
Paradise Sands: The token is located at the top of the Honey Hotel. On the landing with the exercise equipment, use the Super Jet Pack to climb the sign to the roof.20.
Uptown: Climb to the top of the Art Museum. Use the jet pack to jump onto the blue pole. Slide down to rope to the the flag stand.Rex Fury (Astronaut) Your reward for conquering all 20 districts in LEGO City is the character token for Rex Fury in his Astronaut suit.
Lego City Undercover (PS4) – no longer an exclusiveNo longer a Nintendo exclusive, the Lego game that fans forgot is revamped and improved for current consoles.The Switch has been out for just over a month now, and its launch seems to have gone about as well as Nintendo could’ve hoped. But that honeymoon period won’t last forever, especially with E3 coming up – when fans will expect them to announce a number of new games. And if none of them include anything significant from third party publishers, then in that respect the Switch will be doing even worse than the Wii U. Because as Lego City Undercover proves, Nintendo’s last console did have at least a few third party exclusives of note.Lego City Undercover was originally released in March 2013, with a simple and attractive pitch: a family-friendly, Lego version of Grand Theft Auto. All Lego titles have an open world of some kind, but by basing the game on Lego’s own City line of unbranded toys, instead of on a movie or other licence, the parallels with Rockstar’s classic franchise become much more obvious. AdvertisementOddly though, Grand Theft Auto is never referenced directly, even though a stream of adult-rated movies are, from The Matrix and Shawshank Redemption to Goodfellas and The Shining.
In turn the Lego City police department is staffed by obvious parodies of everyone from Columbo and Dirty Harry to Cagney & Lacey and Starsky & Hutch.The hero of the game is likeable supercop Chase McCain, who has the indestructibility of John McClane and the voice of Zapp Brannigan. The game lacks a strong villain though, for although Rex Fury is repeatedly referenced as a mastermind of crime his screen time is miniscule.Even so, the script throughout is superb, and this is one of the funniest video games we’ve ever played. It may not be as subversive as Portal but the endless series of gentle puns and absurdities had us chortling away just the same. ‘I should have joined the army’, complains a hapless mine worker. ‘Then I could’ve been a major not a miner’.‘How’s the building going? Asks one construction worker.
‘The first floor was easy, but the rest – that’s a whole other storey’. The jokes are about as edgy as a snooker ball but we found them all highly amusing, especially the Arnold Schwarzenegger stand-in who manages to mention one of his movies or film quotes in every single sentence.The cast is immediately likeable, but you do feel that a beat has been missed when it comes to the city.
As an open world map it’s well designed, and relatively interactive, but the building themselves are not made of Lego; they’re just ordinary real world objects. And as a result the city can look rather bland a lot of the time.
Lego City Undercover (PS4) – that’s not the Statue of HappinessThe gameplay is still largely the same as all the Lego movie games, and although there’s a greater focus on the open world than usual there are still traditional linear story levels as well. Chase spends much of the game pretending to be a villain, and so has access to a range of different disguises that imbue him with different abilities. His police uniform comes equipped with grapnel gun, a robber disguise has a crowbar, the fireman has an axe and fire extinguisher, and so on. AdvertisementCombat is simplified even by the standards of other Lego games, and never amounts to more than a one-button quick time event sequence. There are no guns at all (‘Stop or I will keep running after you!’ shouts McCain as he pursues a perp), despite them appearing in most of the movie games.There are no side quests in the traditional sense but each area of the city is awash with secrets and hidden extras, as well as hundreds of vehicles and characters to collect and unlock.
It’s not exactly Zelda: Breath Of The Wild, but for children too young to play the real thing it is a passable alternative. Although the vehicle handling is as twitchy and unsatisfying as on the Wii U, which makes long distance exploration less fun than it should be.In the Wii U version Lego City Undercover was single-player only, but these new editions – we’re not sure we’d go so far as to call them remasters – have a proper co-op option. It’s pretty obviously shoe-horned in though, as the other character is just a palette-swapped clone of Chase and his presence is never mentioned by the story or needed for any of the puzzles.Although it was never admitted at the time, the obvious reason for why there was never originally any co-op is because the game ran like a dog on the Wii U. Here though the frame rate is nice and steady, and most of the problems with object pop-in have been fixed. Another problem with the original was the incredibly slow loading times. They’re still awful in this version, and yet are still an improvement on the Wii U version – where it felt like the packets of data were being hand-delivered by an arthritic snail.
AdvertisementEven with its positive changes Lego City Undercover doesn’t feel quite as special as it did four years ago, when it seemed to hint at a new direction for the Lego series in general. In that time the franchise’s release schedule has slowed noticeably, to the point where there are currently no new games announced and rumours suggest that Lego Dimensions might be coming to an end. What happens beyond that is a mystery, but while the foundations of Lego City Undercover are worth building on the rest of it needs tearing down if there’s ever to be real progress.
In Short: The definitive version of the hidden gem in the Lego games catalogue, although the formula is so overused by now it no longer feels quite as fresh as it did.Pros: Well-designed open world is teeming with secrets and genuinely worthwhile collectables. Consistently amusing dialogue and welcome technical fixes.Cons: Simplistic combat and poor vehicle handling. Bland art design and still overly long load times.
The Lego formula is getting very tired, especially with the tacked-on co-op.Score: 7/10Formats: PlayStation 4 (reviewed), Xbox One, Nintendo Switch, and PCPrice: £49.99Publisher: WB GamesDeveloper: TT FusionRelease Date: 7th April 2017Age Rating: 7Email, leave a comment below,.