For a holiday fun event this year our team organized a virtual build event. Each participant got to pick their own wooden puzzle to build. I chose the Robotime Rolife Vintage Camera wooden puzzle kit and really enjoyed building it.
Continue readingCategory Archives: construction toys
Daiso Petit Blocks are my new love
In October, we were going stir crazy. Disneyland is still closed and we have been delaying and delaying vacation. Since I had some to burn, we loaded up the family into the car and drove south, stopping at National Parks and time shares all down California to Palm Springs and back. It was a two week trip and we stayed as socially distanced and sanitized as possible.
In planning for the trip, we heard about Daiso as a “Japanese dollar store”. That description gives you a sense of the store, but it is way better than that. So many interesting small products and foods at low prices ($1.50 or more plus tax).
As you can imagine, my favorite spot was the Petit Block display. There were 20-30 different sets, all in small bags at the $1.50 price point. I bought about 10 that looked interesting on our first visit, but we had so much fun at Daiso that we went back two more times and I bought more sets each time.
The Petit Block is a nano-scale brick, like many of the Chinese brands (and they are made in China as well). The quality on them is really good – so far I’ve only hit one piece that was mis-molded, and the grip is solid.
So this post is a warning that I will have many more little builds to review soon. (Note the Sequoia National Park set is not Petit Block but rather from Impact Photographics as other Parks sets are).
Review: nanoblock Sydney Opera House
The Sydney Opera House is another iconic building in the Sites to See Series of official nanoblock sets. It is not new, and I’ve had the box sitting on my shelf for a few years.
This is another in my long list of nano-scale builds to review. I have a pretty big backlog, so expect more to show up eventually.
This is an interesting build, especially due to the challenge of having roof sections at odd angles. This is achieved through the use of ball and socket pieces at the base of each section. Additionally, the ball pieces are attached together inside two stacks of blocks that lay sideways inside the building. When I was first building this I was worried the stacks would just fall out, but the stacks are secured with some more overlapping building structure.
The result holds together fine, though there is some play in the roof angles and one side can slide back and forth by a hair’s width.
As typical for these nano-scale sets, you get some extra pieces. I counted 62 extra with this set, maybe more if I dropped one or two under my desk.
I really like this one. The look is immediately recognizable, the build technique is interesting, and it goes well with the other scenery on my self.
Link post: New Monkie Kid sets
OK, I really had no idea this was coming when I posted https://www.ispeaksoftware.com/three-builds-based-on-sun-wukong-the-monkey-king/ Who knew that the collectible Monkey King minifig was just a test case for a whole new LEGO theme of Monkie Kid?
Gotta say, I’m kinda impressed by the over the top designs of some of these. They do draw on LEGO’s experience with the Ninjago line. My complaint about LEGO pricing remains, though – no normal kid can afford to collect that toy line. 8 sets with the cheapest at $35? 3 of the sets over $100? (170 + 150 + 120 + 90 + 70 + 60 + 50 + 35) = $745 What kid has that kind of disposable income? You could buy two video game consoles and a game for that! I find it very offensive to my wallet.
Three builds based on Sūn Wùkōng (the Monkey King)
I first learned about Sūn Wùkōng (孙悟空) through Dragonball Z. The character of Goku is loosely based on him, and I even have a t-shirt with Goku and the characters for Sūn Wùkōng in the background. Recently, I’ve found and built 3 versions in 3 different brick systems. One of which is my first set of “LOZ mini” bricks from their Brick Headz line, so I’ll include a review of the differences in bricks as well.
First, a quick group shot.
Continue readingReview: Mini Building Blocks Roadrunner
This was a purchase during an earlier road trip this year (flew to Vegas, drove through St George, Bryce, Zion, Grand Canyon, Glen Canyon dam, Hoover Dam, Red Rock Canyon, Vegas). There were a number of animal themed sets at the Grand Canyon gift shop and this Roadrunner stood out. These “mini building blocks” are nanoblock compatible (look like LEGO bricks but 1/12th the size).
Continue readingReview: Meccano Code ACE robot
Target had a nice sale (half off or more) on the Meccano Erector line of robots. They aren’t new, having started back in 2015, but after looking at the specs and manual I thought they were a good deal on sale. This post will be about the smaller if the two I bought, one of the Micronoids named Code ACE.
New category: construction toys
I’ve already ranted about how the concept of LEGO and software architecture often get abused in an attempt to over-simplify a design. But I do really love LEGO and building things. I find it is a good contrast between building programs and assembling a model. And I know many other nerds will geek out about LEGO. So I’m adding a category for “construction toys” – any toy that you can build up out of small, modular parts.