I've been meaning to pick one of these up for years, but there never was a set that quite caught my eye until last month. I found it. The Manekineko.
Name: Manekineko
Year: 2011
Pieces: Over 150!
Price: ¥846
First off, what is a manekineko? The name means "invite-cat," and they are used, mainly by Asian businesses, to bring money or prosperity to yourself. (http://en.wikipedia....iki/Maneki_Neko)
The package and contents

This is very cool. Why? It has a zip-lock style seal. It's such a simple, smart idea. You rip the top, but like a bag of Canadian Crispers, you can seal the pieces back up after. This is pretty important with pieces the size they are.

Inside you have five loosely color-separated bags. Not zip-locked.

You also get a sticker sheet. The idea is to choose the sticker that represents the desire you have. The meanings are roughly, from left to right: pass (as in, an exam), 10,000,000 coin, bring luck, and prosperity. So, depending on your sticker choice, you are going to be getting some sort of success

The instruction sheet is not the hold-your-hands type; two or three steps are done at a time. I had no trouble putting it together, but I kept wondering where the rest of the instructions were.

The base plate is about twice the width of a standard Lego 2x4 brick. I have mildly pudgy hands (no piano or guitar for me) so you can imagine the fun involved in building.
The Finished Product

I quite like the build of this. It captures the manekineko quite well. The hand up is doing the Japanese gesture for 'come here.'





Leftovers:

Overall
Design: 8/10 This is well made, and I could see these instructions being applied to a Lego version, maybe making use of cheese-slopes and that sort of thing.
Playability: 1/10 This is not for playing, any more than the Lego architecture series is.
Price: 8/10 I think it's a solid value for the yen, certainly as good or better than Japan's Lego pricing. I suspect the company has a healthy profit margin on it though.
Build: 4/10 Just stacking. The series is incapable (at this point) of snot technique or anything beyond the most primitive.

Next to a Lego block, you can imagine how small this is. There are definite ups and downs to this. The big up is that this is something you can imagine an adult keeping at their desk at work without drawing too much attention. And it seems less toy-like, in that, if I gave it as a present to someone, they would view it as a novelty gift in a way they wouldn't with Lego. So it has appeal. But, the pieces are small in a way that makes them unpleasant to play with. If I had 50 Nanoblock sets, I would never bother MOC'ing with them. The size makes it awkward.
So, built, I like it, and it has claimed a position over my desk at home, out of reach from li'l def. I am 100% satisfied with this for what it is. Would I buy another? If the set was interesting enough. But, I won't be becoming a collector in the near future.
I hope you enjoyed reading

























