Schwa Posted September 16, 2018 Posted September 16, 2018 A few questions: 1. Do you consider the Unikitty blind bags to be CMF? 2. Would you display them with CMF? Quote
WhiteFang Posted September 16, 2018 Posted September 16, 2018 These questions are something which I am pondering and developing my thoughts too. My views will come soon. Quote
General Magma Posted September 16, 2018 Posted September 16, 2018 They're not minifigures, so no, I don't. Quote
paul_delahaye Posted September 16, 2018 Posted September 16, 2018 Nah, I don't think so. I would not collect them and display them alongside the figures. But each to their own. Quote
Renny The Spaceman Posted September 16, 2018 Posted September 16, 2018 (edited) Well CMF means Collectable MINIFIGURE Series, Unikitty and friends aren't Minifigures so I'd say no. Edited September 16, 2018 by Renny The Spaceman Quote
BrickJagger Posted September 16, 2018 Posted September 16, 2018 No. There aren't any minifigure parts in any of the bags. Quote
Aanchir Posted September 16, 2018 Posted September 16, 2018 I’m more or less indifferent because I’ve never cared much about or assigned much value to whether a character is/isn’t a minifigure. Like, I wouldn’t treat R2-D2 and C-3PO figures any differently just because one uses standard minifigure parts and one does not. Nor would I arbitrarily assign a higher value to Ant-Man than Giant-Man in the grounds that the latter is too big, too poseable, or made of too many pieces. I mean, they’re all characters, and WHO they are matters to me more than how they’re built. And sure, the Unikitty blind bags aren’t a part of the Minifigures theme, so from LEGO’s perspective they’re a separate category from the other series of blind-bag figures. Again, though, that’s not really a big deal for my collection. I currently keep my LEGO Movie, LEGO Batman Movie, and LEGO Ninjago Movie figures together whether they came in blind bags or not. If/when I finally break down and start collecting the Unikitty theme I expect I’ll do the same with its characters — no matter what sort of set they came in or how they’re built. The way I see it, strictly defining categories is typically a thing completionists worry about, and one they decide less according to any objective system or official definitions than according to whatever lets them exclude the sets/figures of a certain type that they don’t like/don’t want/can’t get and still insist on having a complete collection. I’ve seen about as many people who consider Haunted House and Old Fishing Store modular buildings as who don’t consider Market Street a modular building. Likewise when people debate about whether “near Earth” themes like Life on Mars, Mars Mission, and Alien Conquest are “real” Space themes, whether G2 (2015-2016) Bionicle pieces are real Bionicle pieces, or whether bigfigs are real minifigs, what side they take depends heavily on their opinions on and access to the items in dispute. Quote
Robert8 Posted September 16, 2018 Posted September 16, 2018 No. They are not. Those are brick built characters, not minifigures. Also, not CMF logo there Quote
dr_spock Posted September 16, 2018 Posted September 16, 2018 Brickset and Brlicklink classify them under Collectible Minifigures. https://brickset.com/minifigs/category-Collectible-Minifigures/subcategory-Unikitty! https://www.bricklink.com/v2/catalog/catalogitem.page?S=41775-1#T=S&O={"iconly":0} LEGO calls them collectible figures. https://shop.lego.com/en-CA/Unikitty-Collectibles-Series-1-41775 Quote
makoy Posted September 18, 2018 Posted September 18, 2018 This topic should have a poll. I vote NO. Quote
WhiteFang Posted September 18, 2018 Posted September 18, 2018 I have added a poll and my differing opinion can be found here. My stance is NO. Quote
Blondie-Wan Posted September 18, 2018 Posted September 18, 2018 I don’t even consider CMF to be CMF (i.e., “CMF” isn’t an official term), so no. That said, though LEGO uses the term “minifigure” in a pretty specific, precise way, it’s not as though it’s an official term or anything; there are other toy companies entirely that use the term “minifigure” for other, totally different types of small figures. Hasbro uses it for the little 2-inches-or-so molded PVC My Little Pony figures. If other companies that aren’t even LEGO can describe their miniature figures as “minifigures”, then I think it’s really up to us whether we want to call the Unikitty figures minifigures or not. Quote
Johnny1360 Posted September 18, 2018 Posted September 18, 2018 1: No 2: Yes, if I was into Unikitty, which I am totally not. I actually consider the various robots and dogs to be CMFs as well if they are in the character lineup on the boxart, even though from what I understand, most don't. So if someone wants to call their Unikitty figures CMFs, I honestly don't see why they shouldn't, not could I care less. Quote
one79 Posted September 20, 2018 Posted September 20, 2018 On 9/16/2018 at 11:20 PM, Schwa said: A few questions: 1. Do you consider the Unikitty blind bags to be CMF? 2. Would you display them with CMF? Sorry I am still new to Lego. Could someone kindly explain it to me what CMF is? I keep reading a lot of this word Quote
WhiteFang Posted September 20, 2018 Posted September 20, 2018 14 minutes ago, Johnny1360 said: Collectible Mini Figure Or Collectable Mini Figurines... Quote
MAB Posted September 20, 2018 Posted September 20, 2018 No, because they are not branded that way. But I don't care if people want to call them that. Quote
koalayummies Posted September 21, 2018 Posted September 21, 2018 Princess, I really don't think this matters. Quote
Vindicare Posted September 23, 2018 Posted September 23, 2018 I would say yes. Brickset also has Unikitty listed in the minifigure tab for sets. I mean...she isn’t, but she kinda is... There are other brick built figs that are considered minifigs. Quote
Aanchir Posted September 23, 2018 Posted September 23, 2018 (edited) 11 hours ago, Vindicare said: I would say yes. Brickset also has Unikitty listed in the minifigure tab for sets. I mean...she isn’t, but she kinda is... There are other brick built figs that are considered minifigs. Brickset gets its minifigure data from BrickLink, which has long had a fairly generous definition of what they consider a minifigure (for example, brick-built droids from Classic Space sets have long been listed as minifigs on BrickLink, as have other figure types like Duplo and Fabuland figures). It goes without saying that the Minifigures theme has typically stuck to a much stricter definition of "Minifigure" — the furthest any have deviated from a standard head-torso-legs build is Maggie from The Simpsons series, who has both a unique head and a unique one-piece body. Yet even in that case her head and body are analogous in function to a traditional minifigure head and torso. This is partly a practical consideration — since each series of minifigures gets a shared instruction/checklist leaflet, it would be inconvenient to have to have separate instructions for wildly different builds in the same series (although, some of the more recent series there have been up to seven figures requiring more specific instructions due to increasingly varied neck and hip accessories). Edited September 23, 2018 by Aanchir Quote
Blondie-Wan Posted December 20, 2018 Posted December 20, 2018 It looks like things might be changing a bit here, now... Quote
Robert8 Posted December 20, 2018 Posted December 20, 2018 9 minutes ago, Blondie-Wan said: It looks like things might be changing a bit here, now... Jesus I just dont get how canUnikitty be considered a minifigure? Quote
Blondie-Wan Posted December 20, 2018 Posted December 20, 2018 2 minutes ago, Robert8 said: Jesus I just dont get how canUnikitty be considered a minifigure? Well, “minifigure” is just a word invented to refer to a miniature figure. It isn’t even LEGO-specific; Hasbro uses it to refer to their small PVC My Little Pony figures. Quote
TeriXeri Posted December 20, 2018 Posted December 20, 2018 (edited) It's not a Minifigure in the technical sense (bricks wise), but it's a character that's repeated enough to have made a name within the LEGO franchise, across multiple themes and waves of sets, and 2 movies and TV presence. But it's still not a true minifigure in my eyes. Even something like a Scurrier is closer to a Minifigure as it uses a premade part with arms added on by the factory. It's like a "hybrid". . Unlike brick-built characters like the Brickster who uses arms added by the builder itself using standard technic pin connection. I feel unikitty still falls into the 2nd category of brick-built characters. Edited December 20, 2018 by TeriXeri Quote
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