21 January 2026

Legacy of the Dark Knight’s Combat is the Arkham Ace Up Its Sleeve

By newsgame


While LEGO games aren’t for everyone, upcoming entries like LEGO Batman: Legacy of the Dark Knight indicate that the franchise likely isn’t going anywhere. There’s clearly a strong market for them. On the contrary, it appears that TT Games (formerly Traveler’s Tales) is continuing to ramp up, making ever-more ambitious and experimental titles within the LEGO game formula.

In the case of LEGO Batman: Legacy of the Dark Knight, this ambition manifests in much the same way as in LEGO Star Wars: The Skywalker Saga. Like that unexpected 2022 banger, Legacy of the Dark Knight adopts more traditional AAA design conventions, like a controllable 3rd-person camera and voice acting, in contrast to older LEGO games, which usually had fixed perspectives and no dialogue. The result is a game that is smoother, more multifaceted, and more dramatic than its predecessors. These strengths will hopefully manifest in a number of meaningful ways, but combat is poised to be one of them.

Arkham-Inspired Combat Makes LEGO Batman: Legacy of the Dark Knight a New Kind of LEGO Game

Legacy of the Dark Knight‘s combat is inspired by the Batman: Arkham series. Footage from the game clearly depicts a fluid hand-to-hand combat sandbox, wherein playable characters “magnetize” to enemy NPCs while attacking, a hallmark of the Arkham series’ free-flowing gameplay. Counters are the other part of that equation, and that seems to be there too. Footage clearly shows a prompt appearing over the player-characters’ heads before an enemy attacks, and pressing the requisite button reverses the strike back to the attacker in one way or another.

This is definitely a big point in the pros column for Legacy of the Dark Knight‘s gameplay. While there’s been some criticism for being overly simplistic compared to other melee-focused combat sandboxes, Arkham‘s free-flowing combat is undeniably appealing. It may be more about feeling good than mastering deep or complex mechanics, but there’s nothing wrong with that. Certainly, most players appreciate gameplay that feels good, especially within a superhero fantasy.

Like other LEGO video games, LEGO Batman: Legacy of the Dark Knight will feature several playable characters, far more than the cast offered by the Batman: Arkham titles. This may offer much-needed opportunities for fleshing out the tried-and-true combat mechanics.

Batman Arkham Origins Blackgate combat gameplay

Beat-Em-Up Combat Isn’t the Only Gameplay Similarity Legacy of the Dark Knight Shares with Batman: Arkham

It’s worth noting that, beyond the free-flowing combat model that the Batman: Arkham games popularized, Legacy of the Dark Knight also seems to be taking some cues from Rocksteady’s stealth and traversal systems. As characters like Batman or Catwoman, players can access hard-to-reach areas like perches or the tops of high walls, giving them a birds-eye view of the battlefield. From there, they can initiate enemy takedowns or distractions, or use special tools and abilities to get the upper hand on enemies.

Of course, LEGO Batman: Legacy of the Dark Knight is an open-world game, taking players not only to iconic locations like Arkham Asylum, but to nearly every nook and cranny of this rendition of Gotham City. This gels nicely with the grapple-hook and climbing mechanics of the game, which it also appears to have borrowed from the Arkham series. By blending so many elements from the most iconic and successful Batman game franchise ever, Legacy of the Dark Knight has a real chance at being something special in the LEGO video game world.

LEGO Batman: Legacy of the Dark Knight Could Be the Next LEGO Star Wars: The Skywalker Saga

LEGO Star Wars: The Skywalker Saga definitely isn’t perfect, but it has at least one major broad-strokes success: it feels like an ambitious AAA action-adventure game within the confines of the LEGO formula. Whereas previous LEGO games could often come across as compromised or watered-down versions of the “real” film and comic adaptations, The Skywalker Saga was nearly on equal footing with something like Star Wars Jedi: Survivor in terms of content breadth, quality, scope, and polish.

None of this is to say that those older LEGO games are bad by any means, only that they are less attention-grabbing and cutting-edge than other AAA or flagship titles.

With any luck, the same will be able to be said about LEGO Batman: The Legacy of the Dark Knight. It obviously lacks the photorealism of its Arkham counterparts, but with smart and iterative integration of Arkham‘s combat, traversal, and stealth mechanics, it could very well rival those games. This is especially true since, unfortunately, it seems like Warner Bros. and Rocksteady have more or less abandoned the Arkham franchise in favor of other projects. Indeed, in the wake of Suicide Squad: Kill the Justice League, Gotham Knights, and the cancelation of Monolith’s Wonder Woman project, we are in dire need of a strong, surprising, and satisfying video game set in the DC Comics universe. Hopefully, LEGO Batman: Legacy of the Dark Knight, despite its simple aesthetics and comical tone, will be just that.


Legacy of the Dark Knight batman tag page cover art


Released

May 29, 2026

Franchise

LEGO Batman

PC Release Date

May 29, 2026