Poke’Mecha: In Soviet LEGO, Pokémon Carry You

A few months ago we saw a LEGO robot Charizard. Here’s an evolution of that idea, courtesy of Flickr member Stormbringer. His Poke’Mecha series depict the famous video game critters as large LEGO robots piloted by minifigs. You can’t pocket these monsters.

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Stormbringer said that Blastoise is the first and the sturdiest of the three toys. Venusaur took him the longest to build because he had trouble finding azure-colored parts. Charizard is his favorite of the three because it was a challenging build, particularly its head and wings.

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Summon your mechabrowser and head to Stormbringer’s Flickr page for more on his Poke’Mecha. He said he’s planning on building more of these, which is great news, but I hope he takes his project to its only logical conclusion: make the Poke’Mecha combine to form a larger robot monster. Or at least a huge Pokéball.

[via Laughing Squid]

Toydozer Toy Clean up Set Prevents Dangerous LEGO Injuries

Kids leave their LEGO bricks all over the floor. Well, all toys really, but especially LEGO bricks. And of course it is just a matter of time until you step on one and have to endure the pain. Well, the Toydozer can help.
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The Toydozer set is basically a broom and dustpan for cleaning up toys quickly and efficiently. It scoops them and slides them into the waiting dustpan so that a clean floor can be had in mere seconds. Best of all, you won’t step on any toys and curse up a storm.

It is only $14.99(USD) from Amazon and it is the kind of product that genuinely makes life better. Parents everywhere should buy one. LEGO related injuries are nothing to laugh about. Unless they happen on YouTube of course.

[via This Is Why I’m Broke]

Stackable Brick Mugs for LEGO Lattes

If you work in an office where people are constantly stealing your coffee mug from the staff kitchen, here’s a fun way to keep all your mugs organized. You can stack numerous coffee mugs in these interlocking LEGO-like cubbies, giving each person their own little place to store their mug.

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Each square ceramic mug slides neatly into its cubbyhole, and you can pretty much have as many mug cubbies as you want. Though I’m guessing if you stack them more than three or four rows high without some sort of sticky stuff to hold them against the wall.

Individual stackable mugs go for $19.99(USD) each, while a set of four sells for $74.99 over at ThinkGeek. While that’s not exactly cheap for a set of mugs, they’re definitely some of the cooler ones you’ll find. I guess you could always build a structure from actual LEGO bricks, and buy some of these.

LEGO Akira Kaneda’s Bike Has Twin Brick Rotor Drives on Each Wheel

Shotaro Kaneda’s red motorcycle has become the unofficial symbol of Katsuhiro Otomo’s cyberpunk masterpiece Akira, beating out its memorable characters or even its visionary plot and themes. Two highly talented LEGO builders going under the name The Arvo Brothers pay tribute to Otomo by constantly working on a LEGO model of the bike.

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The Arvo Brothers have been working on the scale model for more than a decade and are now on their fourth version. Writing about their latest build on HispaBrick Magazine, the brothers describe it as “a stylised model that is not very aggressive, homogeneous, without excesses, but it works as a whole.” Their dedication to this single build led them to create a 200-page book about it.

HispaBrick Magazine writer car_mp summarized the Arvo Brothers’ book as follows: “It isn’t a book about ideas, although in its pages you can find many, nor is it a book about building techniques even though from its pages you can decipher the way these guys build. It isn’t an instruction manual either, even though one is included. It is all of that and more. It is a book about an evolution, the evolution of a model and its builders, about a constant search for perfection to confer physical qualities to a dream that arose from a manga.”

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The Arvo Brothers will release a digital copy of their book for free. You can get it from them starting December 14 by contacting them at arvobrothers[at]hotmail.com. They will also make it available on their website, although they didn’t say when. Meanwhile you can read more about The Arvo Brothers and their scale model on issue 18 of HispaBrick Magazine, which is available as a free PDF.

If you think that car_mp’s description of the book is mere hype, read the magazine and you’ll see just how passionate the Arvo Brothers are about their project. For instance, they wax poetic about the beauty of their model’s disproportionately large rear wheel. For better or for worse, these guys are consumed by their obsession.

[The Arvo Brothers & HispaBrick Magazine via Gizmodo]

Great Geeky DIY LEGO Holiday Ornaments: Brick the Halls

You can make some great ornaments just using LEGO bricks. Check out these awesome DIY LEGO ornaments from LEGO builder Chris McVeigh. He has designed a fantastic set of original LEGO holiday ornaments that we can all make ourselves at home.
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He offers downloadable build-it-yourself guides that tell you which individual bricks you need for any given ornament. You can use that info to purchase custom brick colors from LEGO’s online Pick a Brick store. Chris also has ready-to-build LEGO kits available to purchase from his store.

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These ornaments will look amazing on your tree this year. I can’t help but love the Star Wars ones best.

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[via Laughing Squid]

Robotic Companion Gifts For Those Who Prefer Artificial Friends

Robotic Companion Gifts For Those Who Prefer Artificial Friends

Maintaining human relationships can be such hard work sometimes. And if you know someone who’s decided to cut ties with their fellow man and completely avoid all that emotional drama, here are some robotic gift suggestions that guarantee they won’t be lonely as a result. After all, robots don’t really have birthdays to forget, do they?

Read more…


    



Awesome Lego Kaneda’s bike from Akira is a must-have

Awesome Lego Kaneda's bike from Akira is a must-have

The Arvo Brothers have created a perfect Lego model of the most famous bike in sci-fi comic and cinema history: Kaneda’s chopper from Akira. And while Lego may not make it into a commercial set, don’t worry, the Arvo Brothers are publishing an online manual so you can build it yourself.

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NVIDIA fan builds 11k piece LEGO replica of GTX 690

This month the folks at NVIDIA’s desktop gaming sector got in contact with a fellow by the name of Xiaosheng Li, a fan who had constructed a replica of a GeForce graphics card out of LEGO. This feat was completed with a massive number of bricks – 11,396 of them to be exact – and […]

Massive Lego model of Nvidia GeForce GTX 690 graphics card

Massive Lego model of Nvidia GeForce GTX 690 graphics card

Xiosheng Li recreated his Nvidia GeForce GTX 690 graphics card as a massive Lego build. It’s over six feet long and completely not functional, but pretty damn rad. Using 11,396 bricks and taking over three months, the cost of this build is around ¥10,000 (USD $1,640).

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This 80,000-brick Lego kingdom from ‘The Hobbit’ will blow your mind

This 80,000-brick Lego kingdom from 'The Hobbit' will blow your mind

17 year-old Blake Baer and 18 year-old Jack Bittner have built an incredibly-detailed recreation of Erebor, the home of Tolkien’s dwarves in The Hobbit. Using nearly 80,000 bricks and taking around 400 hours to build, this Lego kingdom is simply mind-blowing. It’s 200-lbs and 56" of awesomeness. Just like a dwarf!

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