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Lego Horizon Adventures Fell Into a Sad Forgotten Hole

Sony’s beautiful family game deserved more players

Alex Rowe
7 min readMar 5, 2025
Aloy (dressed in an alternate unlockable ‘townsperson’ costume, explores a beautiful sun-lit Lego forest. A treasure chest sits to the left side of the screen, and on the right is an enticing zipline.
Lego Horizon Adventures has some of the best graphics of any modern game. Too bad almost no one saw them! Screenshot captured by the author on PS5 Pro.

Last year, instead of their usual onslaught of AAA blockbuster action games featuring superheroes and other famous characters, Sony’s PS5 lineup was anchored instead by two more modestly-budgeted family releases.

The first, Astro Bot, went on to immense critical acclaim and general popularity, and even won the top prize at the annual Game Awards show. I have a pretty deep PlayStation friends roster (thanks to years of participating in the Penny Arcade, NeoGAF, and ResetEra gaming forums in various past online lives), and over thirty people on my list played the game. It has all the markings of a true mainstream hit and will probably get a sequel.

Lego Horizon Adventures wasn’t nearly as successful. It launched to middling reviews and tepid fan reception. The Steam version hasn’t cracked 300 user scores yet, with the recent reviews way down in the dreaded “Mostly Negative” territory that serves as a death knell for PC games as it crushes future pushes from the store algorithm. On my PS5 friends list, only five people have played it. I’d consider myself a large fan of both Horizon and the Lego game franchise, and even I didn’t pick the game up at launch.

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Alex Rowe
Alex Rowe

Written by Alex Rowe

I post commentary about gaming, tech, and sometimes music. I’ve written professionally about games since 2005. Look mom, I’m using my English degree!

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