At home, he slid the card into the console. The title screen blinked to life with the familiar jaunty fanfare, but the castle had new turrets and a glowing banner that read "Y2.6 — Updated." A prompt invited him to download the patch. He hesitated only a second, thumb finding A.
What surprised him most were the updates that felt personal. A small note in the update log read: "Added: Memory Lane — for returning players." Selecting it transported Eli to a recreated attic from his childhood: a dusty table with scattered minifigures, a crumpled wizarding newspaper, a tiny sticker with his first save name. As he explored, NPC versions of his previous playthroughs winked and offered tips in voices that sounded uncannily like his younger self. A card on the table displayed save timestamps—dates when he'd first cleared an obstacle, when he'd rescued Hagrid, when he'd spent hours trying to build a bridge out of mismatched bricks. The game replayed short, charming vignettes of his past choices as if preserving them in glass cases.
Eli found the dusty cartridge at the back of a thrift-store bin, its faded label a collage of castle spires and tiny lightning bolts. He’d been collecting LEGO Harry Potter sets since he was small, but this was different: it was a Switch NSP labeled simply UPDATED.
The update also tweaked gameplay in whimsical ways. House points now appeared as floating LEGO studs that tumbled into a scoreboard with satisfying clicks. Puzzles could be solved by building from uncommon pieces found in the environment—an unexpected twist that made exploration even more rewarding. Multiplayer rooms supported hot-swapping players, letting his younger sister drop in from her Switch and immediately join his world, bringing her own tower of colorful bricks that changed the skyline.
As night fell, Eli lingered in the glow of the castle, watching spells make patterns of light and studs fall like slow, deliberate rain. The update had done more than add features; it had stitched new fabric into an old tapestry, honoring past play while inviting fresh mischief. When he finally powered down, the Switch displayed one last message: "Thank you for playing — version Y2.6." The console hummed softly, as if the castle itself had breathed a contented sigh.
Eli smiled, already imagining the next session—what new corners of the updated Hogwarts might reveal themselves, and which memories would surface when he walked Memory Lane again.