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MAB

Eurobricks Archdukes
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Everything posted by MAB

  1. I doubt LEGO care too much about counterfeits of old figures that they no longer sell. The ones they seem to be targetting are modern figures from current sets.
  2. More likely you will continue to get what you get now as that is what sells well to kids at the low price points, and DC fans get nothing (or sets from another manufacturer when LEGO indicates they want to break their relationship with DC). While the $20 Marvel sets are a bit lacking, I thought the recent $30 sets are pretty decent for the price (like Gargantos Showdown). Same with the $40 ones.
  3. This is the one from the UCS Landspeeder, and they wanted to flag up the C-3PO from that set. So I'm guessing they just put the two minifigures from the landspeeder set in the email. There has been a lot in the BL forum recently about one seller (a $1M + store) that had lots of Joker figures and someone couldn't understand how they could have so many. The seller posted images of pallet loads of sets but he was still suspended by BL for weeks but is now allowed back, with the Jokers, but in a lower number. It could be that this all blew up from there.
  4. DC only gets about 5 play sets per year anyway these days. If LEGO take them away, you would not get anything else extra for Marvel. But even worse, the DC license would likely go to another brick manufacturer who would produce more sets than LEGO do that would take toy store shelf space.
  5. The full email is available for everyone to read on mail chimp. https://mailchi.mp/eac856c8810e/counterfeit-minifigures-immediate-action-required There have been probably fake parts for sale on bricklink in the past. As always, you should always check the seller's feedback and reputation and look at what else they currently sell. If they have 1000 of an expensive figure but no other stock, then beware. If they have 100 of an expensive figure but loads of other parts, or incomplete sets the figure came from, they are more likely to be legit. It is further complicated if the seller sells incomplete sets elsewhere or sell just the figures fast but keep back the parts or incomplete sets for some years before selling them. Do bricklink think before they send the messages? They write "highly desirable LEGO Minifigure in hundreds or thousands from a single source" but the first figure they bring up to be aware of is sw0778, a cheap, common figure that has been around for some years in many sets including in the advent calendar and in a foil pack from a magazine. There are loads of those magazine foil packs that don't get sold with the magazine and so large numbers of them or the figures in them find their way to bricklink. The unique C-3PO in the UCS set is understandable, but not common Luke.
  6. GWP are always one per household but that is rarely enforced as their order system cannot handle it properly. As always, if you place a qualifying order and they say you are getting one, then don't get one, complain and return the whole order at their expense.
  7. This might also give them a good indication as to why animals should not be on PAB, or animal prices should be increased further to help set sales.
  8. That is pretty much the point. Big companies know they cannot do it. But the same rules apply to all. And this is LEGO reinforcing it. To me, it is about endorsement. If Eurobricks (or a LUG) advertise they are giving away Eurobricks branded LEGO minifigures it implies that LEGO has endorsed them. The same applies whether it is a fan group, a huge gambling website or a small, craft beer company.
  9. It still depends what they are doing with them. If McDonalds prints it's own logo on a LEGO minifigure torso and gives these away without permission from LEGO (even if they don't claim they are LEGO or use LEGO logos) LEGO would likely step in and stop them. The other party (here McD) is implying there is some sort of endorsement or agreement in place if they give away LEGO branded items.
  10. LEGO already does all that. Not every product they produce should necessarily appeal to a large number of existing buyers though. When they produce 100s of sets a year, there is no harm in having a small number of them based on new subjects or licenses to keep attracting new buyers too.
  11. What do you mean - toys? These are precision building parts from adult models! The main backlash against plastics here is not against reusable plastics but single use plastics. I cannot really see lego being able to monetise virtual building, given the amount of free software for it.
  12. I'm surprised to see these described as just plain terrible. It shows the issue LEGO has if they are to bring anything back, as I like the heraldry on those ones.
  13. It is not really that they are only making expensive sets for classic themes now, more that they are making one expensive set for each of Castle and Space (not too bad for space). For those on a budget, it will probably be a case of using bricklink to buy the more common figures and building parts of it (or smaller MOCs) with existing bricks or buying those parts too. If they become true themes again, I'm sure we will get smaller sets too.
  14. Everything LEGO does tends to be subjective, as it depends whether you like it or not. Fantasy based Castle sets were good for historical castle fans, if you remove the dragons or the trolls and all the other bits that don't fit with what you want. I guess it depends on whether you focus on what you can use or what you can't. Yeah, someone else posted about it about a month ago. Let's hope it appears on online PAB.
  15. Knock off CMFs came out and were available on aliexpress but it was some years after the originals. I bought a few to see quality, they are very different quality feel plastic to genuine ones.
  16. I'm not surprised. It has probably damaged sales of all hard to find parts now people know that many of them are made to order rather than prototypes or tests or whatever people want to call them.
  17. Was HISTORIC ever considered though? As Nexo Knights is clearly not historic, even if there was a great big Castle logo printed on it. In that sense, a LEGO theme can be split between different EB forums (it happens with City having a home in both Town and Train). The Historic category for a community that builds outside of the constraints of LEGO themes is much better than aligning with LEGO themes. If this was Castle instead of Historic, there would not be a place for things outside of what LEGO calls Castle, so LOTR would need to go presumably into licensed, fantasy builds would need to go elsewhere, there would be no home for Vikings, Romans, or Ancient History, same with Chinese and Japanese style builds. There are even some people that complain if you put a musket in the hands of a minifigure and call it Castle. Whereas Historic gives so much more freedom. There was quite a lot of good in Nexo Knights, especially on the villains side if you like fantasy. Jestro's volcano could easily fit into a fantasy castle theme, if the heroes' vehicles were removed and replaced by horses.
  18. That is why I tend to stick to the (relatively) common parts. If hands in a specific colour only appeared in one minifigure from 15 or 20 years ago, I'll pass on that one. Does it mean I am not complete? Sure. But then I am fairly pragmatic when it comes to collecting, for me the fun is in the collecting rather than the having, and I am not so interested if a figure will cost me $50 or $100 to complete. I don't think the illegitimate parts makers would bother doing them in current production colours, so even if I need to buy on bricklink then I am fairly sure I am getting LEGO produced parts. If they decide to flood the market with plain parts that are worth < $1, there is not really anything in it for them.
  19. They could not have enough and have to produce more. But that is not really what I meant. I meant if someone presented that as a MOC, it looks like they ran out of the right colours. I know that is not what happened, and it was a design feature in many of the castles of the time, putting in black bricks around those big panels. To me it is not random (the regular placing of four black splotches around each window as below) so doesn't look like stone decay or variation in colour, but an intended decoration. But I guess it was the only way they could try to add interest at the time. To me using dark grey would at least have tied it into the decoration printed on the panels although a mixture of dark and light would have looked better still. That said, the red bricks used in Knight's Castle looks even worse.
  20. Yes, perfectly allowable for private use. This is more about other companies (including not for profit companies, AFOL conventions, etc) doing it as a commercial activity.
  21. When I look at that, I assume they ran out of light grey hinges and had to use black. I prefer changes in texture or depth (offsetting forwards or backwards) over abrupt colour changes.
  22. That is not down to community, it is down to moderation on Eurobricks. We are told Nexo Knights is action and adventure - it is named in the contents - and off topic posts get moved. Plus there is no Castle forum on EB. There is this wider historic theme, but Nexo Knights doesn't fit into that being futuristic.
  23. A lot of that is probably due to the growth in numbers of sets in the other unlicensed themes. While there are a lot of licensed sets spread out over many licensed themes, there is also a large number of unlicensed sets but they are spread over only a small number of themes. Look at the numbers of sets within the big three in-house kid focussed. minifigure based themes just for 2022 (excluding magazine foil sets): it is approx 30 Friends, 25 Ninjago and 50 City. If those 100 or so unlicensed sets were spread over 8 or 9 unlicensed themes with 10-12 sets in each theme per year (so roughly the size of Harry Potter or Minecraft). LEGO likes to spread licensed sets over many different themes, presumably to attract fans of the many franchises, but tends to have a a very narrow number of unlicensed themes but with a wide variety of sets within each theme. 10-15 years ago, City used to run at about 25ish sets per year, excluding all the "superpacks" of individual sets sold together. The dates in the growth of the numbers of sets in City and Friends corresponds to the loss of themes like Alien Conquest, Monster Fighters, Galaxy Squad, etc. Last year was similar (and data complete): City 59, Friends 47, Ninjago 45, Monkie Kid 12, Vidiyo 43, Creator 37, Technic 15. compared to: DC 13, Disney 32, Potter 17, Jurassic 9, Marvel 41, Minecraft 11, Minions 5, Star Wars 39, Mario 45. City plus Friends plus Ninjago plus Monkie Kid (163 in four themes) is just about the same as DC plus Disney plus Potter plus Jurassic plus Marvel plus Minecraft plus Minions plus Star Wars (167 in eight themes). It seems like there is a lot of licensed, with 8 themes, but in reality the overall numbers are similar as they are half the size on average. Those numbers from Brickset will be boosted by magazine gifts. Vidiyo and Mario will both be heavily skewed due to the small figure packs that were catalogued individually. And I have left out Art, Brickheadz, etc as they are a bit of a mixture, as well as CMF and DOTS.
  24. I also had one as a kid. And still have it as an adult. The main unit is a nice enough copy of the shape but I'm not sure I'd want to display it. I don't display the real thing either. I'm not a fan of the 3D models from the games. The games were 2D, so a screen / panel with some 8-bit style graphics on it would have been preferable even if they didn't want to do a full TV with it.
  25. My kids often watch YouTube tutorials at the same time as building. It can help with creativity, as they get to see methods and designs not used by LEGO.
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