I have a theory about people who develop software.
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skategoat π π΅πΈreplied to Kyle Davis last edited by
@linux_mclinuxface Dev. Thought the bits were lame, didn't do anything.
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Kyle Davisreplied to skategoat π π΅πΈ last edited by
@felipe huh.
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Amelia Bellamy-Royds :progress:replied to Meg last edited by
@megmac @Chigaze @linux_mclinuxface I don't think I ever had Lego kits (there were some bought for my older sister, but it was all a big bin by my time), but I personally find it sad that Lego seems to have turned into 3D jigsaw puzzle kits instead of free-form creativity tools.
Like, I understand why the company wants it that way: They want you to buy more for each project instead of re-using pieces. But it's not the same.
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Kyle Davisreplied to Amelia Bellamy-Royds :progress: last edited by
@AmeliasBrain @megmac @Chigaze itβs also easier for them to do licensed stuff: if they make a Star Wars kit they can sell to Lego and Star Wars geeks.
Canβt do that with just bits.
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Paul Turnbull π¨π¦ πΊπ¦ π΅πΈreplied to Kyle Davis last edited by
@linux_mclinuxface @AmeliasBrain @megmac To be fair while their front line marketing is the kits you can still by straight blocks of all types. I know a number of people with large block collections.
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Kyle Davisreplied to Paul Turnbull π¨π¦ πΊπ¦ π΅πΈ last edited by
@Chigaze @AmeliasBrain @megmac very true. The kits are just so much more marketable and marketed.
To put it another way: A bucket of bricks is something you buy for yourself, a kit is something someone buys for you.
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@linux_mclinuxface @Chigaze @AmeliasBrain I definitely mostly got kits when I was a kid but to be honest Lego wasn't my biggest "building block toy." I was actually way more into Construx (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Construx), and a lot more of my freestyle building was with those (though they were also kits). It kinda seems like, even aside from the bigger emphasis on branded stuff, there's also a big loss of variety of this kind of alternative building toy.
Either way when I was a kid I don't think most of the kits were branded ones. They were mostly just generic space ships and castles and towns. I kinda wonder if that also still felt more freeform-able since "Lego Millennium Falcon" feels a lot more shelf worthy than "Lego Space Ship no.204".
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@megmac @Chigaze @AmeliasBrain oh man, I had some construx but were definitely a lego family. I recall building rather gigantic swords with construx. Weβd fight with them and they fall to bits in a satisfying crunch upon impact.
We also had quite a few Capsela as well but I understand that was rather obscure.
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So: my theory went out the window.
I was going to guess developers would be mostly in the "used the bits for own purpose" category like me.
I know as a kid I would go find the kit with the best bits, and literally throw the instructions in the bin within minutes of getting home.
Oh well.
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freeformz π³οΈβπreplied to Kyle Davis last edited by
@linux_mclinuxface always follow the instructions the first time. After that - build whatever.
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Kyle Davisreplied to freeformz π³οΈβπ last edited by
@freeformz I got a lot of that response.
I recall being older and helping my younger cousin put together a kit and watching him follow the instructions carefully and thinking "really? people _use_ those?"
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Chris Huck :freecad: :ubuntu:replied to Kyle Davis last edited by
@linux_mclinuxface I never got any #Lego sets as a kid. However, I received #Construx and an #Erector set. In both cases, I built all of the things in the instructions, which is how I learned how the pieces interact. However, I later learned that some of the pieces in the Erector set fit with the Construx⦠So, from then on, I combined the two into lots of my own creations. I often wish I still had some of both to recreate the cool stuff I made as a kid.
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Kyle Davisreplied to Chris Huck :freecad: :ubuntu: last edited by
@chrishuck huh. I had no idea that construx interacted with erector sets. I had a little bit of erector stuff.
(Also, several folks have brought up construx⦠I thought it was obscure! Guess not, at least here!)