- Joined
- Dec 12, 2017
I don't think 3D printed bricks would hold together nearly as well as the originals, and 3D printed models tend to be fragile.
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This is so cringe it loops around to being kinda based
"Why, yes, I do have a lot of reddit karma, how could you tell?"
you see guys the age of the influencer will totally do away with all of the stupid rating websites I guarantee you these people paid a stipend from these major corporations every single month to say these games are great it was like the fallout TV show that was the most astroturf thing on the face of the planetI listened to the Stellar Blade video, and his "debunk" of the claims the game was censored is ...nothing. He never addresses the censorship. He complains that they didn't hire enough consultation because otherwise Hard R Shop and Crime R Shop wouldn't have made it into the game.
I don't know if this is the right place, but last night there was a microsoft showcase where they showed off a new Perfect Dark game that isn't Perfect Dark, and the new Fable game that was beaten with the DEI ugly stick. Expecting to see people roast these games for being dogshit, what I found was a bunch of corporate shills.
https://youtube.com/watch?v=4hRwQ4BZ0Pk:855
That's what I'd worry about – the plastic is usually quite brittle – but it might work OK for current-year Lego builds that are put together once and for all, and never taken apart.I don't think 3D printed bricks would hold together nearly as well as the originals, and 3D printed models tend to be fragile.
What about the tolerances? Before Lego survived on branding and 3rd party IPs, one of the biggest things keeping them superior was the ultra-tight tolerances the parts were made with, compared to cheaper brands with sticky parts that didn't quite fit.That's what I'd worry about – the plastic is usually quite brittle – but it might work OK for current-year Lego builds that are put together once and for all, and never taken apart.
That's exactly what I'm saying – a lot of Lego seems to have evolved from "freeform construction toy for children" to "easy model kit for adults". 3D printed Lego-type bricks would be TERRIBLE for the former, but for the latter, the tolerances aren't so important because either a stroke from a file or a dab of glue will get the pieces holding together adequately.What about the tolerances? Before Lego survived on branding and 3rd party IPs, one of the biggest things keeping them superior was the ultra-tight tolerances the parts were made with, compared to cheaper brands with sticky parts that didn't quite fit.
They deserve it, their stuff may be miles better than chink sweatshop shit, but that's a low bar to set, and it doesn't mean they get to slither away scot free with their ridiculous prices, advertising tactics and business practicesIt's fascinating that people in this thread spend 99% of the posts shitting on garbage Chinese shit but still have time to shit on one of the very few toy companies in the world that still produces quality products in Europe.
I had seen a guy buy one set copying, er, some starship (not Star wars), and some parts were custom huge chunks instead of tiny interconnecting bits that had various material in the original model.There are a lot of cheap chiner brands of Lego out there that make replica sets of licenced Lego ones, or even "MOC" (my own creation) sets that let you build things beyond the scope of what you can get from Lego. Those bricks aren't perfect either
If you have siblings, pray they don't have boys.holy shit (mini PL ) I wanted to offer some small Lego set to one friend's son for his birthday: 20 euros for ONE lego car is absurd.
It's been addressed by others already but another reason is 3D printing takes a long ass time. For reference (not from personal experience), printing a Warhammer-like model at a small scale can take 8 hours or more. Photoresin is also brittle and leaves leaves behind layer lines which need to be cleaned up. ABS plastic (the same shit Lego is made of) printing is possible but I have no clue if you can print a convincing Lego clone from that.You know, with the rise of 3D printing, I'm surprised at the lack of people printing their own legos, just the plastic required for it must cost way less than the average lego kit
I know lego has a patent on the block and ya can't exactly go around advertising lego piracy, but you'd think there would be SOME community for it
Is it speed champions?We can't took away the quality of their products, but holy shit (mini PL ) I wanted to offer some small Lego set to one friend's son for his birthday: 20 euros for ONE lego car is absurd.
Maybe I'm biased but I have the impression that the gap between quality and mediocrity is not only growing, but brands that sell quality products have indecently increased their prices in recent years. I know inflation yada yada but when I see hiking shoes for 200 when I had paid mines 50 at the time, and they still hold up when well maintained after 10 years, I can't stop but wondering what the fuck happened.
The saddest part is we can't even count on thrifting anymore since it became kind of mainstream now.
Per model? Large armies must take forever.For reference (not from personal experience), printing a Warhammer-like model at a small scale can take 8 hours or more.
No, it's Cars's Duplo. I don't think he's interested with famous collectible racing cars (yet?) and he's too small anyway.Is it speed champions?