According to Anatowii (which looks suspiciously like a Nintendo advertisement) they look a little something like the image above.
Now, I’m not quite sure where the batteries go in there, but it’s good to know that when you can’t get past that level in Mario and you throw your controller against the wall, it feels your pain too.
This 8-Bit Trip stop motion Lego video has been all over the Internet recently, so if you happen to have missed it until now, prepare yourself for awesome:
What’s better than watching the LEGO Millennium Falcon get built in stop-motion?
Watching the LEGO Millennium Falcon get built by a bunch of Star Wars Minifigs in stop motion.
Though I can only imagine how long it takes to build a 5,195 piece model like this, it must take exponentially longer to build it and film the whole process as a stop-motion movie along the way, so be sure to check it out so that the guy’s efforts don’t go to waste!
LPE Power makes pneumatic LEGO engines that you can build yourself that are very small, powerful, and capable of speeds in excess of 2000 RPM!
Currently, an inline 3 and inline 4 engine are available, though plans are in the works for a full V8, and they’re perfect fits for any of your LEGO models – trial trucks, cars, construction machinery, etc.
Think you’re ready for scale model power like never before?
If you don’t mind the idea of storing your valuables inside of a bunch of plastic bits and pieces, then the Lego NXT Safe might be the way to go for a DIY security solution.
Features include 6.5 kilograms of weight, a 7 centimeter thick door opened via a motorized lock, internal safety bars to prevent [...]
The Lego minifig is a cultural icon, having been introduced in 1978, and remaining virtually unchanged for thirty years.
To see the evolution of the iconic figure, Gizmodo painstakingly collected and cataloged almost every minifig ever produced into a photographic timeline, and it’s a great look through the history of the fixed limb figure.
[Gizmodo - [...]