LEGO Sauron is easily the most powerful enemy in any story I mean imagine if you step on him. You would probably just vanish from the universe entirely
To anyone wondering why Sauron looks like that in Middle-earth Shadow of War (last one). It's his physical appearance as Annatar, who went to Eregion and tricked Celebrimbor to create the One Ring and three rings for elves. Shadow Elf that Talion is connected to - is Celembrimbor himself.
Ekhem, wtf are you saying? Sauron made the One Ring alone. He did not trick Celebrimbor into doing anything. He just gave him knowledge. They made Nine and Seven together. Celebrimbor made Three alone.
@@bartoszrebelski8571 celebrimbor made the 9 for men and 7 for dwarfs and also the 3 for elves with knowledge from sauron then sauron created the one ring binding all the others to it along with a majority of his essence in order to dominate every ring bearer the dwarfs resisted it and just became greedy as hell the elves sensed his hold and removed their rings and men got turned into ringwraiths
I definitely see what you mean, it doesn't seem to be his style. I mean don't take me wrong canonically in the movies his speed can be somewhat superluminal in places. He isn't the type of person who would need to run.
@@Guardsman66 If you will keep dying until you have 3 lives left, you can choose to play as a hero again (of course if you had that possibility earlier). After eagle took me down, I just keep respawning and jumping into ther river until I got 3 lifes left. Then, after choosing Sauron again, I was looking at this flying bastard, before crossing the bridge.
Swat a few thousand elves like flies just by a wave of his hands. Destroy a few big ass giant mountain sized lamps which it would be a CGI marvel to see. Summon lava from the earth lol Torture some1 til insanity. Make cute dragons who roast u alive )))) And don't get me started on prime dude Morgoth while exploring the universe lmao Ummmm what did I miss? Lol I would be going on and on about what a bad God can do but il be sued for copyright lmao
Say what you will about Lego Dimensions and all the real life expensive expansion packs you had to buy to 100% the game (which I may or may not have done), but one of the things you deny about Dimensions is how much care the creators put into creating their worlds as well as their characters, like rehiring Steve Blum to reprise his role as Lord Sauron from Middle Earth: Shadow of Mordor.
Melkor be like : EVERYTHING IS NOT FAIR FOR ME !!! IT SHUD BE ME !!!! MEEEEEEE !!! NOT HIM MANWE !!!! Manwe be like : 😶 Melkor : I am the most overpowered being in Arda !!!! Not him !!! I am even more handsome than him! More badass !! Cooler ! Why do people fond of Mairon ? Manwe : well, brother, you will have your own fans one day.
Morgoth's primitive ideologic needs and his dimorphistic compulsive nihilistic madness proliferate his existential being into one of many generical antagonists. Lawful evil > chaotic evil. Sauron's goal lies in distinguishing himself from the filthy pseudological deeds of the imperfectionistic illustration of everyones (including eru's) vision, by forming all of arda's inflation into his perceptional conception of peace, justice and order for the long term, through part time tyranny. Morgoth shines through his sheer destructional power gap, yet he seems to lack any form of wisdom, as well as crystallized, fluidizing intelligence. While sauron lacks physical strength, he makes up for it through his indoctrinating manipulative as well as charismatic masking. Being a great trickster and tactician, following his internal branded ideology passionately not through frustration, but through visionary undoings make him a better character than his former master in my opinion. Because i for myself, would trade any kind physical power for omniscience and intelligence.
@@ainuannatar1632 eyyy, Mairon, Annatar, my lovely ainu. Take it easy on ya. Actually, Melkor did smarter than Mairon. But, their Goal of domination is different. Melkor wants to destroy Arda including what's inside, It's kind of a protest for Eru since he cannot create anything like his brethren, and since his creation is only some ugly stuff, he kinda angry to Eru. He also jealous to his younger twin brother manwe. Since Manwe had Varda (the most pretty ainu in ainur, and rejected by Arien who has similar look to Varda) (I read the books btw). Melkor is greedy of power, his power hunger growth just like his name. While Mairon domination is kinda explicit. He wants to be same as Valar, not serving anyone since he has capabilities like Valar. So, Mairon domination is like someone showing their boss if they can be a boss themselve. While Melkor is just want to destroy what eru's made and pleading his own version of creation. Both of them are smart, genius. Melkor always win over his brethren and succeeding his plan. Mairon as well did a great job. But they have different goal.
@@ojustasmr1705 Well, according to Tolkien, both Morgoth as well as Sauron were motivated by different desires. According to Tolkien, Morgoth and Sauron were meant to represent two different kinds of evil: Morgoth represents evil as a result of a desire for independence from the Creator and everything outside of the self. Morgoth may have been the ''most powerful'' Valar, but in the end his attitude was like to that of an angsty and destructive teenager, wanting to corrupt or destroy everything created by his father out of spite and whim and a desire to be as different from him as possible. In a sense, by corrupting things Morgoth claimed them as ''his'' in compensation for his inability to create without changing something else, since only Eru can create from nothing, and his ''invention'' of evil was as far from Eru as Morgoth could imagine, as he tried to make himself. Morgoth's problem was he valued absolute freedom from everyone but devalued others' freedom whenever he had to whim to. He also had a habit of imparting his power into other things and beings such that by the end Morgoth himself had become much weaker. Sauron, in contrast is meant to represent evil as a result of wanting absolute power and control over everything. Unlike Morgoth, Sauron did not object to the idea of god in principle; he wanted TO BE god. He believed that Eru was too much of an aloof, and therefore uncaring, Creator: that due to not micromanaging his creation Eru was being neglectful and responsible for all the suffering in the world, including Morgoth the first dark lord whom Sauron considered to be, despite being closer to the ''truth'' and having provided useful knowledge and power to Sauron over the years, a failure like the other valar, because none of them sought to take on Eru's role but only chose to oppose or serve Eru. As a perfectionist and craftsman, Sauron desired to make things the way he thought they should be. Therefore, Sauron does not believe himself to be evil; in fact he believes he has become ''reformed'' from when he trusted Morgoth. He merely believes he is using suffering like a tool to minimize it in the long term by becoming Middle-Earth's de-facto god and bulldozing or brainwashing all opposition. He believes in order but fails to understand the value of freedom when all it does in his estimation is exacerbate suffering. Sauron's power during his regime in the second age overthrew Morgoth's during the end of the first age ''power'' wise, as well as success wise. This fact alone puts him over most valar (combat, as well as intellectual wise (most valar weren't combanant's), as he became on par with Morgoth (the mightiest as well as the most powerful of all valar) himself at some point. It took numerous valar to defeat/banish Morgoth for eternity, while Fingolfin (an elf, not even of the race of the ainur (maiar/valar) severely wounded him, and managed to stood and put up a fight against the once mightiest of all valar, while it took numerous valar to bring morgoths regime to an end, which makes them look/sound embarrassingly silly and overrated in my opinion. While Morgoth, at least initially, was stronger than Sauron - Morgoth descended into a nihilistic madness as he couldn’t manage things on his way. Morgoth wanted to destroy and annihilate the Arda and render it into primordial chaos. In this respect he represented complete madness - i.e. Chaotic Evil. Sauron had other plans. Once his former master had been deposed, the Valar basically returned back to their own complacency and left the Middle-Earth on its own devices. This provided Sauron an opportunity. Sauron was the mightiest maia, and had once been one of Aulë’s maiar. He had much better insight of the Music of the Ainur and the intentions of Eru Ilúvatar, and wanted to rule and reign the Middle-Earth, not destroy it. He wanted to make homophony of the Music, not discord. Remember which vala, archangel, Aulë was? Yes, he was the maker of the things. He was the Great Grandsmith, and as such, he represented order. And Sauron was no different - or, rather, he was Aulë’s evil twin. Sauron too wanted order and organization. He was ruthless to boot, completely amoral and had no such impeding things as ‘love’, ‘empathy’ or ‘compassion’. He represented complete selfishness - i.e. Lawful Evil. Instances representing Lawful Evil tend to be much wiser and more intelligent than those representing Chaotic Evil. To get order and organization you need wisdom. Chaos means only destruction of things. Morgoth squandered all of his life force into the very essence of Arda, to pollute and corrupt it. In the end he got locked in his corporeal form (fana), and other valar were astonished on how weak he in the end became. Sauron did it the other way. He concentrated his essence into the One Ring, meaning it was his horcrux. As long as it existed, he could always assume a new form and renew his power. In the meantime, he used Men as his minions, not as something to be destroyed and annihilated. For them, he was a God-King. He wanted to reign and dominate, not destroy. Sauron got convinced both the valar and Eru himself had completely abandoned Middle-Earth after the events of Akallabêth and removal of the Undying Lands from the material world into other dimension. He felt he had basically been given free hands to do whatever he willed. He never descended into the nihilistic, Chaotic Evil, madness as Morgoth did. But at the same time, while his horcrux - The One Ring - was the manifestation of his strength, it was also his weakness. As long as it existed, he could regenerate and dominate. But once it was destroyed, it also put an explosive end to his plans of omniconquerism. Sauron did not reflect foolishness like his former master morgoth did. He never sought to overthrow the Valar, as he knew through his inhabit power comparison he was unable to, althrought he viewed himself as the incarnation of perfection in form of personality psychology by distinguishing himself from all non-perfection, as we are perfect in our imperfection. He wanted to reflect perfectionism in reforming all of arda to his bidding. I also don't understand why youtube isn't giving me any notifications on messages from time to time. Really annoying.
@@ainuannatar1632 but melkor is genius. His habbits of sharing anything is one of his strategy. He knew he will lost in the battle. He knew it. While he is gone, his legacy remains in Middle Earth cz his power stay still. It's in the Ring of Morgoth. He understand about the concept of ring of power. Mairon (sauron) suggest him about that but Melkor rejected his idea bcz in his mind. Ring like Sauron suggestion will be easily banished by them who overpowered him. But by planting his darkness in the land of Arda. His evil legacy remains forever.
Imagine you’re a soldier of gondor, you’ve fought countless orcs, you’ve made it right to the black gates of Mordor, you’re fighting alongside elves and dwarves, and you’re actually doing really well.Then suddenly a giant armoured being marches up to where you are and begins swinging a huge club.And that is also the first time any of you have actually seen Sauron the lord of darkness.
LEGO Hobbit released in April of 2014. Battle of Five Armies didn’t come out until December of 2014, so it would have been hard for them to include it in the regular release of the game. Maybe as DLC, but that might not be allowed in the contract, depends on what they negotiated for the game.
If Lego came out with a Sauron figure I would buy it. Edit: I Love the version of Sauron is Middle Earth Shadow Of War because when I fought him I was afraid for my own well being.
There were two Lord of the Rings animated movies yes. I know that he was in the first one, shown as a horned humanoid on a red screen, pretty cool-looking form what we could see.
Well sauron is more comparable to the emperor both of them are villians without the big stage, they are the minds behind everything. Vader is a tragedy while sauron and the emperor enjoying being evil
Bro the Shadow of Mordor and War games were so fucking amazing, especially the last one, i replayed it like 3 times and still feel like replaying it once again i love it, its in my top 5 games I hope they make a third one
Honestly I agree they took risks by doing things that are not in the cannon, but I honestly think it is still awesome. Everyone thinks of the micro transactions, but now that they are gone I don’t understand why some Lotr fans put it off so much
@@riggidynail7228 Yeah some fans are too hardcore with the "canon" side, with the new lotr series that's going to come out they're also being too hard with it, saying that it should never happen or whatever
@@okeh8854 The worst fanbases ever when it comes to canon is Tolkien fans in general, Star Wars fans, basically every good and old famous series, or film because 80s to 2000s nerds are extremely annoying when they get older
@@hamzad5755 Not really, at the point of the movies he was more powerful than Morgoth was at the First age. Plus book Morgoth was not that good of a fighter. Movie Sauron would be able to defeat book Morgoth if he had to to fight him instead of Fingolfin.
dark lord sauron was once an adventurer but then one day he took an arrow to the knee so he retired and start living as shadow ghost of the past days F for him and his carrier
I was very confused by that too. That is not how the ring can be destroyed (for those confused - Sauron's ring cannot be destroyed willingly. Story wise the fall in the volcano has to be a pure accident)
8:30 holy that looks awful. was recently thinking about revisiting these since i never saw the third one. but damn i dont know if i can handle that. looks fan-made. peter why
Tbf it was obvious a lot of the CGI was made in a rush. Originally,Peter Jackson wanted it to be a 2 parter but execs wanted a trilogy and we got a bloated story filled with unnecesarry subplots
Y'all are so salty lmao, what do you want, a medal confirming that you have superior tastes? I am very certain that if this was in the LotR trilogy you would be praising it as the best thing ever. Gate keeping to the finest, I swear.
@@jedofaxa1147 it looks objectively bad tho. you talking about yourself gatekeeping criticism? the irony is that you're the saltiest one here. i appreciate what the dude above said about having to rush out the films, i didn't know that. but damn dude look at yourself.
@Rayane Toy ReviewsNgaming actually Sauron lost the power to took a fair form after his body was destroyed during the Fall of Numenor. After that he could only took a dark terrible form, who matched his inner evil. In the books he is described as having a huge humanoid dark body, with black hands and a terrible gaze.
Where are the first 3 games that came out?? Two towers game you fight sauron in the beginning and return of the king game he is in it as well at the end. Why were these games just completely skipped over??
@@dripchief8837 Ah, I think he wanted Sauron to be an additional character in that game. You see Mortal Combat sometimes has additional characters in there. Now there is also RoboCop, Rambo, Terminator, the Joker. As in characters from other stories sometimes get in Mortal Combat for player fun.