scott lang, completely misunderstanding peter parker’s power: hey if u want man we could get tiny and just like hang out, i don’t know if you’ve ever been in a lego castle but it’s pretty sweet
peter parker: u have no idea how much physical pain having to turn this offer down is causing me but,
I was gonna SAY, Tony would fly out there, look at the thing, and go…. No, this isn’t life size. Impressive though. Okay, bugs, put on these helmets, we’re taking this into orbit and doing this at 1:1 scale.
i cant believe @subspacecommunication singlehandedly redeemed risa by suggesting it has something other than impeccably manicured astroturf sex parks
Legoland Risa is a big deal and nobody can convince me otherwise. :D
Whenever any character talks about Risa with those leery grins on their faces, unless they specifically state they’re interested in sex, they’re definitely talking about Legoland. They’re all really excited to go to Legoland Risa. It’s the biggest Legoland in the Alpha Quadrant (it’s the biggest Legoland ever, but there’s a running joke that the Gamma Quadrant houses an even bigger Legoland nobody has ever seen), and has lego recreations of half the Federation fleet, and little lego people of every Federation species.
Nobody goes to Risa for sex. Everyone goes to Risa for the lego.
This is my LEGO design for the Danube-class runabout in Minifig scale. It comes with a full interior, removable roof sections, and optional weapons pod. Check out my page for more pics and details: http://www.mocpages.com/moc.php/380979
What could possibly be better than a pile of LEGOs, each tiny piece so full of potential? How about LEGO bricks made of mouthwatering chocolate? Yep, that’ll do it. These awesome, completely functional and 100% edible Chocolate LEGO bricks are the work of Japanese illustrator and designer Akihiro Mizuuchi.
The bricks are made by pouring melted chocolate into precisely designed molds. After the chocolate has cooled, the edible LEGOs can be popped out of the molds and used just like regular LEGO bricks. That is, until you’re overcome by the urge to start eating them.
Architecture Studio, a new set from Lego, comes with 1,210 white and translucent bricks. More notable is what it lacks: namely, instructions for any single thing you’re supposed to build with it. Instead, the kit is accompanied by a thick, 277-page guidebook filled with architectural concepts and building techniques alongside real world insights from prominent architecture studios from around the globe. In other words, this box o’ bricks is a little different. Where past Lego products might have had the happy ancillary effect of nurturing youngsters’ interest in architecture, here, that’s the entire point.
Seventy-three different kinds of bricks are included in the set. But bricks are easy to find. It’s the guidebook that’s truly new. Its pages offer accessible overviews of basic architectural concepts, along with illustrated exercises for exploring them in Lego form. Pages on negative space and interior sections, for example, encourage budding builders to think not only about how their miniature creations look from the outside but also in terms of what sorts of spaces they contain within them.