Lego Batman team got help from the people behind Arkham games

1 week ago 3

Published May 18, 2026, 12:17 PM EDT

WB studios are known to collaborate together, says TT Games' lead

Batman on the Batcycle driving through the streets of Gotham. Image: TT Games/Warner Bros. Games

Sign in to your Polygon.com account

Lego Batman: Legacy of the Dark Knight is out Friday (or Tuesday, for Deluxe Edition owners), and reviews have dropped ahead of its launch. For the most part, reviewers have come to a consensus: the latest Lego Batman is a worthy successor to the beloved Batman: Arkham games.

And now that critics have rolled credits, they've confirmed that the Arkham series did more than just provide inspiration for Legacy of the Dark Knight — Rocksteady collaborated on the new game.

As spotted by VGC, about two dozen developers from Rocksteady are listed in the credits of Lego Batman: Legacy of the Dark Knight, including a producer and several programmers. Rocksteady made Batman: Arkham Asylum, Arkham City, and Arkham Knight as well as the creatively titled VR spinoff Arkham VR. Rocksteady's latest shipped game was 2024's Suicide Squad: Kill the Justice League, which failed to garner the same kind of positive reception as the main Arkham games.

Warner Bros. Games Montreal is also in the credits of Legacy of the Dark Knight. The studio developed Batman: Arkham Origins and Gotham Knights and has provided additional support on several other DC Comics games, like Suicide Squad.

Cross-studio pollination isn't too surprising as Rocksteady, Warner Bros. Games Montreal, and Lego Batman main developer TT Games are all owned by Warner Bros. Games. As head of the development team at TT Games Jonathan Smith told Polygon, this is par for the course.

"The studios do collaborate and support each other on their projects [...] We're really pleased to be part of WB Games, and we've got friends and colleagues at other studios," he said.

In an interview with Polygon, Smith talked about setting out to make "the definitive Batman game." Doing that meant rebuilding combat systems, and the result is basically an Arkham game made out of Lego bricks.

Additional reporting by Matt Patches.

TT's Lego Batman (2026) recreates the iconic scene from The Batman, where the superhero slowly walks toward the Penguin, who is pinned in an upside down crashed car. Related

Read Entire Article