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Friday, November 19, 2010
Best ... villain ... ever
Andrew Becraft put together a rendition of Magneto using available LEGO elements that is simply perfect.
Thursday, November 18, 2010
Nanananananananana - Bat Theme!
Between 2006 and 2008, LEGO released 13 sets in the Batman theme. One of the first released, and, at $10, a cheap way to get Batman himself, was 7779, Catwoman Pursuit

As a building set this was not great. The dragster was kind of silly, based mostly on the long curved wedge element and the large bat wing. The gatling gun on the front is kind of nice, though that design was around in MOCs before this set. Also Catwoman's motorcycle is just your basic one-piece (well, more like 6 piece) design, even though you can make an amazing motorcycle using LEGO elements. For me this set was all about the figs. These are great renditions of both Bruce and Selina. Okay, I'm not thrilled about these being flesh-toned rather than yellow, but I'm over that by now. Also, due to the placement of the eye-holes in the cowls, you can't easily interchange with another head, but you're pretty much going to use these figures as originally built rather than as fodder for making your own characters. It's also nice that Catwoman's head is double-sided, so you can view here with or without her goggles.
You can view the inventory at Peeron, the instructions at LEGO.com, or buy a copy at BrickLink. (Holy cow! It starts at $80. I'm very tempted to sell mine now.)

As a building set this was not great. The dragster was kind of silly, based mostly on the long curved wedge element and the large bat wing. The gatling gun on the front is kind of nice, though that design was around in MOCs before this set. Also Catwoman's motorcycle is just your basic one-piece (well, more like 6 piece) design, even though you can make an amazing motorcycle using LEGO elements. For me this set was all about the figs. These are great renditions of both Bruce and Selina. Okay, I'm not thrilled about these being flesh-toned rather than yellow, but I'm over that by now. Also, due to the placement of the eye-holes in the cowls, you can't easily interchange with another head, but you're pretty much going to use these figures as originally built rather than as fodder for making your own characters. It's also nice that Catwoman's head is double-sided, so you can view here with or without her goggles.
You can view the inventory at Peeron, the instructions at LEGO.com, or buy a copy at BrickLink. (Holy cow! It starts at $80. I'm very tempted to sell mine now.)
Wednesday, November 17, 2010
Tuesday, November 16, 2010
Dark Knight
Alex Schranz built this Dark Knight as a reinterpretation of Fredoichi's bust that I blogged a few days ago.
Monday, November 15, 2010
Sunday, November 14, 2010
Friday, November 12, 2010
What's the worst comic-book movie ever?
Catwoman certainly has to be up there on the list. Anyway, Teti-tots came up with a cube-dude version of Batman's felonius feline foe. Holy alliteration, Batman!
Thursday, November 11, 2010
Wednesday, November 10, 2010
Tuesday, November 9, 2010
Monday, November 8, 2010
Sunday, November 7, 2010
Saturday, November 6, 2010
Friday, November 5, 2010
In brightest day, in blackest night
Ring need charging? Use JustJon's Green Lantern Power Battery. It's even got a light-up power function. (Another fairly recent MOC, btw - see, I'm not just all about dredging up old MOCs.)
Thursday, November 4, 2010
Mr. Sandman, send me a dream ...
Okay, this is a different kind of comic, but my favorite graphic novels are by far the Sandman tales penned by Neil Gaiman. Shane Larson made a great series of MOCs based on these haunting stories.
Wednesday, November 3, 2010
Look! Up in the sky!
It's a MOC by me. Some time ago now I made this Superman. Notice, I don't personally do customization, so if you look at this from a different angle you'll see that Clark is sporting a plane blue torso rather than his signature S.
Tuesday, November 2, 2010
New Gothopolis
Here's one that really takes me back. About ten years ago, Tim Saupe, creator of FBTB visited LEGO's North American headquarters. While there he saw a great creation sitting on the desk of Master Builder Erik Varszegi, New Gothopolis. This 48x48 baseplate was packed with buildings from both the Marvel and DC universes, like the Daily Planet building and Dr. Strange's mansion. Of course it was also populated with custom figs, ranging from Two-Face to Galactus and Thor to the Flash. Doors pop open to reveal furnished interiors, and there's even Clark Kent changing to Superman via a revolving door. Follow the link to see all the great details.


A big thanks to Ace Kim, admin over at FBTB, for re-uploading these pictures for me.


A big thanks to Ace Kim, admin over at FBTB, for re-uploading these pictures for me.
Monday, November 1, 2010
Ooh, new Spidey
Another brand new MOC, a builder named 'Okay' gives us a street battle featuring our favorite web-slinger, his darker side Venom, and foes Doc Ock and the Green Goblin.
Sunday, October 31, 2010
Saturday, October 30, 2010
Micropolis
The members of TwinLUG, a LEGO Users Group based in the Twin Cities, pioneered the micropolis standard. This set of standards allows different builders to make microscale (that is, much smaller than minifig-scale) units and then fit them all together to make a collaborative city layout, such as this one. Why feature this, you ask? Look closely and you'll see both the Superfriends' Hall of Justice and Fantastic Four's Baxter Building. Universes collide!
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