Oh, and currently there’s no co-op but that’s promised in a future update. You can buy things online for a cheaper price and then just play them. On PC we have the unique situation where you can totally ignore all the toy stuff and just play the damn games. It’s like a 3D LittleBigPlanet with characters you actually care about. Community Content is where you play other people’s levels in an infinite stream of content. The Toybox is a Minecraft-type affair where you can explore Disney areas or create new levels using anything you’ve bought or unlocked from the whole Disney, Marvel or Lucasfilm realm. There’s a base in the front of the TV, and you put little expensive immovable (but still kinda cool) toy figures on it and they appear in game! The Play Sets are the story-based single-player/co-op campaigns. Disney Infinity is the Disney equivalent of Skylanders, Amiibo or LEGO Dimensions, their version of this toys-to-life craze that Activision started. And there’s a lot more stuff on the website anyway, like the Star Wars Rebels Character Pack. Play Set Packs for example are £12.99 on the Website but £14.99 on Steam, and Character Packs are £10.99 on the website and £12.99 on Steam. It’s just as useful since you have to link your Disney Infinity account to the game anyway, so you might as well buy stuff on the website which you then can still use on the more convenient Steam version. Next major point: even if you’ve downloaded the game from Steam, do NOT buy anything from the Steam page! This sounds silly, and it is, but the prices on Steam are £2-£3 more than they are on Disney’s website.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |