

Since Lego Dimensions is for kids, the puzzles aren't as tough as in the main Portal games, but, honestly, building your very own Companion Cube and Sentry Turret is fun all on its own.The 30-second clip features narration from Salma Hayek‘s Ajak beginning with a recap of Avengers: Infinity War and Avengers: Endgame reminding fans of how Thanos erased half of the universe’s population before the Avengers brought everyone back. GLaDOS plays a major role in the story, while a complete Portal-themed expansion can be unlocked if you pick up one of the Portal Lego packs. The toys-to-life game Lego Dimensions combines Portal with a number of other popular franchises, including various DC Comics franchises, Doctor Who, The Simpsons, Ghostbusters, The Lord of the Rings, Back to the Future, and more.


Ellen McLain even returns to voice GLaDOS, offering you instructions and "advice" as you progress. That means that you'll have to worry about things like how much weight your structure can support while also making sure vehicles driving on top avoid lasers, hit the right switches, and travel through portals safely. With all of these projects, there aren't a whole lot of resources for Portal 3, no matter how badly fans might want it.īridge Constructor Portal, for example, fuses ClockStone's engineering-based simulation game with Valve's sci-fi puzzler. The Vive is getting a substantial update sometime in 2018, and most of Valve's in-production games will be virtual reality titles (the only non-VR game that the company has announced since Dota 2 came out is Artifact, a Dota 2-themed card game). As of this writing, virtual reality is keeping Valve very busy. Most crucially, Valve collaborated with HTC to create the Vive, which some argue is the best consumer-grade virtual reality headset on the market.

In 2013, the company announced SteamOS, a Linux-based operating system devoted to gaming, and a line of devices known as Steam Machines intended to bridge the gap between consoles and gaming PCs (after almost half a decade, Steam Machines are still around, although they haven't sold as well as Valve had hoped). Way back in 2000, Valve teamed with Cisco to create PowerPlay, an initiative designed to speed up consumer internet in hopes of improving online gameplay.
