Follow us on:
LittleBigPlanet PSP Review
14 out of 15
This smaller version of LBP is a certified winner.
Date: Tuesday, November 17, 2009
Author: Brendon Lindsey

  • Game: LittleBigPlanet
  • Platform: PSP
  • Publisher: Sony
  • Developer: SCE Cambridge Studios
  • ESRB: E
  • Genre: Pocket LittleBigPlanet
  • Players: 1


  • What's Hot: Just as fun as the PS3 original, the new story levels are wonderfully designed, and the lack of floatiness is a welcome change


  • What's Not: I'm sure going to miss pulling and pushing my friends' Sackboys around...



  • Review by: Brendon Lindsey

    Every so often, we play a game that just makes us smile. We may be able to explain why; we may not. Either way, they remind us of why we love playing video games, and the emotions they're capable of eliciting. LittleBigPlanet on the PSP is such a game. Like LBP on PS3, it has an undeniable charm that will make you fall in love with it from the moment Stephen Fry begins instructing you as you run through the opening credits. What surprised me most isn't how intrinsically happy LBP PSP is, but how similar it is to the PS3 version in almost every way, and how it even improved upon it in others.

    For those of you unfamiliar with the original LittleBigPlanet, it's a physics-based platformer, with an adorable Sackboy (or Sackgirl) hero. You jump, grab, pull, swing, and push your way through great levels, designed in such a way that there's nothing else out there like it – except the other LBP, that is. The PSP version features 30 brand new story levels, based in seven unique settings. Like the PS3's, each is filled with composite characters asking you to do things for them, as you find your way through the level's puzzles and hazards.

    Amazingly, the physics of LBP work perfectly on the PSP. I expected something with LBP skin that played only slightly similar (due largely to the fact that SCE Cambridge, not Media Molecule, was developing it), but it plays just like it does on the console – and in some ways is arguably better, mainly due to its lack of ‘floatiness’.

    Floatiness was one of the biggest complaints many had about LittleBigPlanet. The way Sackboy seemed to float when you moved and jumped made precise control sometimes difficult. That element is almost eradicated in LBP PSP, making it much easier to perform delicate jumps, and hit just the right spot to grab that item bubble.

    ClaDun X2 Review
    Double the content with slightly less charm
    Ninjamurai Review
    Lots of game, lots of frustration, but in a good way.
    Hey, you got a hardcore RPG in my fighting game!
    There’s no school like the old school
    Most wines don’t age this well.
    See what surprises await you for the rest of the year.
    Wizards of the Coast and Hasbro brings new franchise to the worlds of TV, TCG, and online gaming.
    Multi-platform MMO's from Spacetime Studios prove to be popular with people.
    Another game joins the pay-what-you-want bundle for Android, Linux, Mac and Windows.
    Prinny: Can I Really Be The Hero? Preview
    We sit down with Nippon Ichi’s latest title: a hardcore platformer for the PSP!
    Star Ocean Second Evolution Preview
    The Star Ocean saga continues and we get a hands on look.
    LEGO Batman: The Videogame looks and plays a whole lot like its LEGO predecessors, which is its greatest strength and weakness.
    God of War III and MAG top a long list of new titles hitting PlayStation 3
    A look at Square Enix's triumphant return to the wonderful world of Ivalice!