So far, theLego Batmangames have differentiated themselves from the other licensed Lego games in that they haven’t adapted the stories straight from the movies. While audiences can play through the Death Star trench run or the tank chase fromThe Last Crusadein theLego Star WarsandLego Indiana Jonesgames, they can’t play throughThe Dark Knight’s opening bank heistorBatman Returns’ Christmas tree set piece in theLego Batmanseries. Instead, eachLego Batmangame has an original story written specifically for them.

To tie in with Michael Keaton and Ben Affleck getting back in the cowl forThe Flashandthe introduction of Robert Pattinson’s Bruce Wayne, Warner Bros. should make a newLego Batmangame that finally adapts all the Batman movies and incorporates all the different Batmen (West, Keaton, Kilmer, Clooney, Bale, Affleck, Pattinson, and maybe even Conroy) as playable characters and all the different Batmobiles as driveable vehicles.

The Justice League in Lego Batman 2

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In 2008, the series began with the release ofLego Batman: The Videogame. This game was notable for being the first licensed Lego game to eschew the movies’ storylines in favor of an original plot. That plot sawBatman’s entire rogues’ galleryescape from Arkham Asylum and spread chaos across Gotham. They split into three groups, each led by one of the Bat’s most iconic enemies: the Joker, the Penguin, and the Riddler. This premise actually set up a brisk, action-driven story incorporating just about every beloved Batman villain, so it made sense to streamline the narrative that way.

Michael Keaton as Batman

The problems with the original storytelling began with 2012’sLego Batman 2: DC Super Heroes, which introduced Superman, Wonder Woman, and the rest of the Justice League as playable characters. This time, the plot concerned Lex Luthor’s run for President, but it’s just used for a series of chases and puzzles and most of the action revolves around Luthor’s “Deconstuctor” weapon, not his political power. The game is a dream for fans of open-world gameplay, but the narrative leaves a lot to be desired.

2014’sLego Batman 3: Beyond Gothamiswhere the series really started to lose the plot. Brainiac attacks Earth, prompting an unlikely team-up between the Justice League and the Legion of Doom. This was a promising setup, but the ensuing story is all over the place with repetitive gameplay and random out-of-the-left-field plot points that have nothing to do with any of the rich worldbuilding in the DC Comics universe.

Batman v Superman in The Lego Batman Movie

These games are for children at the end of the day, so nobody’s expectingLast of Us-level storytelling, but it’s baffling that Warner Bros. keeps peddling uninspired, perfunctory original stories in itsLego Batmangames when there are a bunch of action-packed, visually stunning Batman stories sitting in their library, unadapted into Lego game form. What made theLego Star Warsgames work so well was having Lucas’ familiar narratives as a jumping-off point. No player is ever particularly invested in the story of a Lego game. The point of these games is to play as your favorite characters in a plastic brick-filled environment. Using stories that audiences are already familiar with allows for a healthy dose of nostalgia.

If there’s going to be aLego Batman 4, it should adapt all the wildly different tones of the movies – the German expressionism of Tim Burton’s movies, the hypercampness of Joel Schumacher’s movies,the gritty realism of Christopher Nolan’s movies, the unabashed ridiculousness of the Adam West movie – into the same game. It could even separate the different portrayals of Gotham into different hubs so players can switch between the gloomy metropolis in Burton’s movies and the seedy urban landscapes of Nolan’s movies.

Since the last couple ofLego Batmangames have incorporated other DC heroes and fans have gotten used to that, a third hub could adapt Batfleck’s DCEU films with Henry Cavill’s Superman andGal Gadot’s Wonder Womanas playable characters. Zack Snyder’s Gotham is possibly the most stylized to date, taking influence from the sumptuous gothic visuals of theArkhamgames. While some aspects of Snyder’s DC movies were controversial and his Batman was criticized for being a cold-blooded killer, no one would complain about the ability to play through the brutal warehouse brawl or fire Batfleck’s pump-action shotgun.

If such a game does end up getting made, it shouldn’t have weird isolated lines of dialogue from the movies likeLego Jurassic WorldandLego Star Wars: The Force Awakens. These audio clips always sound jarring and out of place, especially when they’re crammed in without the original context. The developers should either get the actors from the movies to come in and record new dialogue, like they’re doing withthe upcomingLego Star Wars: The Skywalker Saga, or go back to the classic grunt-based storytelling of earlier Lego games.

It seems unlikely that Warner Bros. will makeLego Batman 4, since the franchise has become much bigger than Batman.Beyond Gothamwas followed up witha spin-off entitledLego DC Super-Villains, suggesting Warners want to move away from the series’ connection to just the Dark Knight and focus on a largerLego DCfranchise similar to theLego Marvel Super Heroesgames. But that seems like a wasted opportunity, because they made three wholeLego Batmangames and not a single one used the Bat’s most beloved on-screen stories.

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