lego death star year

lego death star year

lego death star worth it

Lego Death Star Year

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In the original Star Wars trilogy, the Death Star was the ultimate weapon, capable of destroying an entire planet. Judging from the time gap between Revenge of the Sith and A New Hope, the first Death Star took the better part of two decades to build. While it may not have taken decades to build, LEGOLAND Windsor Resort has just constructed its own LEGO Death Star for its Star Wars Miniland Model Display. It was a massive undertaking. The video above chronicles the construction of “the biggest Lego Star Wars model ever made,” which is comprised of over 500,000 LEGO bricks and stands 8 feet wide and 13 feet high. It took a team of 15 professional LEGO model makers three months to construct the LEGO Death Star. The model recreates the Rebel Alliance’s attack on the Death Star with additional Rebel X-Wings and the Empire’s Tie-Fighters attached to the model, all of which are also made up of LEGO bricks. The Death Star’s planet-killing laser blast was also recreated with light and sound effects.




In the video, LEGOLAND also offers a quick glimpse of the rest of the Star Wars Miniland models, including the famous Cantina scene, the Wampa’s lair from The Empire Strikes Back, the Hoth battle between the Rebels and the Empire, as well as the Death Star trench run. LEGOLAND Windsor Resort will open on March 11, but if you don’t want to travel to the United Kingdom to see this Star Wars display, you can also see a similar LEGO Death Star and Star Wars exhibit at LEGOLAND California. What’s your impression of the LEGO Death Star? Use the Force and search your feelings below! Image Credit: LEGOLAND Windsor Resort Lego UCS Death Star is 4,000 pieces of Star Wars bliss 09.02.2016 :: 11:14AM EST The 3,800-piece Death Star that Lego launched way back in 2008 was one of the most amazing sets they’ve ever released. Now they want to sell you an even better one. Feast your eyes on set number 75159, Lego geeks! This bad boy smashes through the 4,000 brick barrier and hits your wallet with all the planet-obliterating force of the Death Star’s superlaser.




When it’s up for order, the UCS Death Star will go for $499.99. Yes, that’s a lot of money… but it’s pretty typical per-brick pricing for a licensed Lego set. Lego’s giving you plenty of bang for your buck, too. The UCS Death Star comes with a whopping 25 minifigs– that’s one more than the previous set and the new versions are wonderfully detailed.You get Luke and Han in both their default dress and their Stromtrooper disguises, and another Luke dressed for his showdown with Vader. You also get Vader himself, Obi-Wan, Leia, Chewbacca, R2D2, C-3PO, Emperor Palpatine, Grand Moff Tarkin, and a whole assortment of Death Star crewmen. There are mixed feelings from Lego fans about the new set. Some feel that it’s far too similar to the original and that Lego missed an opportunity to do something really exciting with it. Others (like me) enjoy the minor tweaks and are glad that they’ve got a second chance to add a big-ass Lego Death Star to their collection. Outsiders, meanwhile, are screaming “$500 for a Lego set?




Which side are you on? subscribe to our newsletter: Subscribing to a newsletter indicates your consent to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy.If you’ve got the time, lack of willpower when it comes to buying shiny things, space to house a giant plastic sphere, and the money, you actually might want to build it anyway. Given how much I’ve written about Lego on io9, it’d be safe to assume that I’ve built a lot of it in my time. So when the company recently retired its old Death Star collector’s set (a set popular enough to have been continuously sold since 2008) to make way for shiny new version that was basically the same, with a few upgrades and new minifigures, I saw it as an opportunity to stretch my usual Lego habits: get a set I’d long been wanting to own, and build something considerably larger than any other Lego set I’d built before. When Lego released all of its new Star Wars products at the end of September to mark Rogue One’s “Force Friday,” I threw down a considerable chunk of money—$500, to be precise, making this both one of the biggest and most expensive Lego sets available—and eagerly awaited its arrival.




A few weekends ago, massive box in hand, I made way to my kitchen table and set to work. Then I opened the Death Star box, and suddenly started worrying.Then I started sorting out bag after bag of Lego bricks out on the table, and started worrying even more.The thing is, you don’t really think about the fact that four thousand pieces of Lego—4,016, to be precise—is a humongous amount of Legos until you see them splayed out on your kitchen table in an endless sea of studded bricks, threatening to consume everything in sight. Had I bitten off way more than I could chew? Was I actually going to finish it in a day, or even a weekend? Was I beginning to have a really bad feeling about all this? I did the only thing an idiotic blogger who’d gleefully told his colleagues about buying something extremely dumb thinking it would make a great blog the week before could do: I sat down and started sorting Lego bricks like my life depended on it. Or, at least, my free time. The first section of the Death Star you build is, unsurprisingly, the base.




It looks big here, but it’s actually tiny compared to the rest of the superstructure you go on to build on it. By the end of that first weekend, I mostly felt like I hated myself (for buying the Death Star), Lego (for making it), and the Empire itself (for designing everything in the exact two same shades of grey). The process of building a modern Lego set, unlike the sets of your childhood where you spent just as much time rooting around the box for the one piece you needed, is highly regimented—section by section, it’s divided and split into sets of bags, easily numbered so you know which exact amounts you need to build each specific piece. It tightens your focus into the moment-to-moment building of a set, rather than the bigger picture, regardless of how big that bigger picture actually is—in this case, the bigger picture is a daunting, 16" by 16" diameter sphere.Sometimes that process is mundane—like repeating the pattern of building the same structure for a piece of flooring that you’ll end up doing another three times in a row to create each of the four layers of the Death Star, or the curved walls that will give the final playset its spheroid shape.




Its in those moments you’ll hate building the Death Star the most, as your raw fingers, slowly being shredded by pressing down on pointy plastic bricks, get dragged into doing the same pattern over and over again. But sometimes, that process is taking you through some truly clever and ingenious bits of design work that makes you appreciate the effort that goes into creating sets as lavish as these. The Death Star in particular is filled with “aha!” moments like this, because instead of just being a model of a spaceship or a vehicle, it’s a full-on play set. There’s even a little dianoga you can slot through the floor of the trash compactor, like its peering through the trashy depths! The Death Star set isn’t really an accurate recreation of the infamous battle station—it’d be impossible, if not a little boring, to try and achieve that. Instead, it’s a series of vignettes of things you remember happening on the Death Star in A New Hope—and, for one section, slightly awkwardly, Return of the Jedi.




So you get a bit that’s the trash compactor. A bit that’s the detention block Han and Luke break Leia out of. You get the bit where Obi-Wan disables the tractor beam. The aforementioned Return of the Jedi bit is actually the Emperor’s throne room, complete with highly unsafe giant chasms and falling gangways. These little scenes are complete and engaging builds on their own, before you consider the place they take in the overall look of the final Death Star. They’re filled with play features that might seem simple when built, but while you’re putting them together, it will make you feel like the greatest engineer on the planet. Even something as simple as a winch-operated lift.The fact that it took me over 20 hours to make the Death Star, all in all—spread out over two weekends—might seem like it’s far too much effort for a Lego set. But it was these moments of cleverness, how the thing you had no idea what you were building was meant to be until finally slots into a larger whole, that made that time feel well spent.




The other bit that made it worth it, unsurprisingly, was the cavalcade of delightful Star Wars characters you got to populate the Death Star with once you’d finally put it together. Witness the firepower, etc. etc. No Lego Star Wars set is really complete without minifigures, and the Death Star doesn’t skimp on them, either. Aside from little brick-built bonuses like a mouse droid or the dianoga, it comes with 25 figures. You get your heroes... Look at that fabulous head of hair on Han Solo. A whole swathe of figures specific to Return of the Jedi for the Emperor’s throne room... I swear that’s Grand Moff Tarkin in the middle, not a very confused Lego Twelfth Doctor. Stormtroopers—two of which are Han and Luke in disguise, which have spare helmets to turn into normal troopers... Sterner face, same majestic Han Solo hair. And, perhaps coolest of all, some extra Death Star personnel—Gunners and officers you can flesh out the generic areas of the playset with, whether its preparing to fire the superlaser, or standing around a briefing room:

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