I can see a future where we pretend this never happened.
I can see a future where we pretend this never happened.
That helps me understand the thought behind it, but I don't think I agree with the conclusion.
Fine points, and really I do agree that it's silly to drop questions that are directly answered by the article. Doubly so when the article isn't much more than a couple of paragraphs.
At the expense of sounding like a bitch, what makes this heartwarming? There's nothing particularly heartwarming about a couple doing something together, not inherently at least. And there isn't anything inherently heartwarming about people waiting in line to purchase something day one.
To those curious I just looked up how much bulk bricks go for on the Lego website. The best price I can find so far is 650 bricks for $30. Which means that this project could have cost them around nine grand. And that's not accounting for the special figures or bricks.
Oh and this is probably what I was thinking about:
I want to say I've seen more expensive but I'll have to check to see if I'm just imagining things. They've had some really elaborate sets though, that's for sure. That Falcon though, it is pretty kick ass.
I don't know why but this got funnier the second time I looked it over, and it's not losing steam.
Oh you.
I would have also accepted, "Clearly this man is a builder."
Do people wake up in foreign countries missing legs?
Okay maybe not always.
We have a winner.
I guarantee if Lego made this a kit people would buy it. But I'm also pretty certain it would cost a kidney.
I wish people would stop wasting perfectly good LSD on animals...
Alliteration is always better.
Well to be fair it's sometimes difficult to call these articles. And that's not a comment on Luke (I like a fair amount of his articles) so much, or any other author in particular. But the reason I say that is I've seen more content on Tumblr. I mean sometimes the only practical difference between an article on Gawker…
Lego games are best played for their charm if for no other reason. They're never challenging, but collecting and unlocking things can be fun. The game play is very simple mechanically, you rarely have more than 1-2 attacks. Everything else is choosing the right minifig to complete whatever your goal is, be that…
I'm not sure how I'd feel about this if it were real. On the one hand I love Lego games. On the other hand I love them mostly for the humor. And though I certainly loved Sean of the Dead, I'm not sure this material would work as a Lego creation. I'm only basing that on a few videos and reviews however. The Last of Us…