lego portal 2 youtube

lego portal 2 youtube

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Lego Portal 2 Youtube

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Before you can vote for cool new LEGO sets, or submit your own you'll need to sign in with or register for a LEGO ID: You're currently signed in to LEGO ID as . Would you like to sign in to LEGO Ideas with this LEGO ID? LEGO Ideas is designed for older builders. We’re sorry, but based on the birth date we have on file for you, this means we can't let you have an account here. Create and Share Galleries as a place to share your models with other LEGO builders like you. Are you sure you want to log out of LEGO Ideas? Portal 2: Aperture Science Official LEGO Comments 1 Last Updated 7 months ago. Click "Updates" above to see the latest. This is a fully playable, custom level of the Aperture Science Enrichment Center. Checkout the video below. The level is packed with features and moving parts, all coming together to give you an actually-completable test chamber that follows the rules of the video games. Work your way through the level and finally face-off with GLaDOS!




Turrets & GLaDOS are both highly poseable Larger moving parts can be controlled from the outside of the set using control parts, so manipulating the level is fast, smooth and easy (and cool)! Neither the videos, nor the photos show you everything the set does - that would defeat the test! The set features two chambers; the main test chamber and GLaDOS' chamber above. Custom turrets (different to the dimensions versions), Chell, a companion cube and observation room above the test chamber are also included. Now you're thinking with portals! This article is within the scope of the Portal OverWiki Project, an attempt to improve articles related to Portal, Portal 2 and Lego Dimensions. Please see the project page for more details about the current article status. This article has yet to be cleaned up to a higher standard of quality, per our Cleanup Project. It may contain factual errors and nonsense, as well as spelling, grammar and structure issues, or simply structure problems.




Reader's discretion is advised until fixing is done. You can help clean up this page by correcting spelling and grammar, removing factual errors and rewriting sections to ensure they are clear and concise, and moving some elements when appropriate.Please notify the administrators before removing this template. Pongthep Charnchaichujit (original design)[1] Repulsion Gel, also known as Bounce Gel, is a testing element used in the Enrichment Center several decades before Portal and introduced in Portal 2. It is one of four types of Mobility Gels. Repulsion Gel dripping from a vent in Sphere 02's Test Chamber 01 in Test Shaft 09 A portal is sent into Repulsion Gel by the ASHPD. A Repulsion Gel glob about to crash on the ground. A glob bursting after hitting the ground. Jumping on walls thanks to Repulsion Gel. The Repulsion Gel effect. Combine OverWiki has more images related to Repulsion Gel. ↑ 1.0 1.1 Tag: The Power of Paint official project page




↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 2.6 Repulsion Gel demonstration on Combine OverWiki's YouTube channel ↑ 3.0 3.1 Portal 2 Collector's Edition Guide ↑ 4.0 4.1 4.2 Game Informer, April 2010 issue ↑ Valve Hires DigiPen Team; Seemingly for Portal 2 on ShacknewsPORTAL 2 LET'S PLAY | How to be the best Portal player! It is officially Jessica Jones day, and to celebrate, Comixology is offering a variety of Jessica Jones comics at discounted prices.Included in the sale is the entire collection of Alias comics, written by Brian Michael Bendis and drawn by Michael Gaydos. Launched under Marvel's MAX label, Alias is the series that the Netflix show draws its inspiration from.For those that want to learn more about the character and her backstory, this is the series to do it with. Each issue is currently available for $1, meaning readers can get the entire collection for $28.Those who have been trying to keep up with Marvel's New Avengers series will also be glad to know they can get the entire second volume collection of the ongoing series at half-price.




The specific collection ran from 2010-2012 and starred Jessica Jones and Luke Cage (who also has a starring role in the Netflix series) alongside Spider-Man, Ms. Marvel, Wolverine and The Thing among others.Also included in the sale is the entire collection of Pulse, another series written by Bendis that focused on a specific part of The Bugle, the fictional New York City newspaper that appears throughout the Marvel universe.Jones is also the main figure in this series, working as an investigative journalist alongside Luke Cage. Each issue is available right now for $1, making the entire collection $14.There are a few other single issues available to buy that Jones makes an appearance in, so if you wanted to learn more about the titular superheroine, this is the time to do it.The sale ends on Nov. 29. For a quick explainer before you dive into the series this weekend, be sure to check out the video below.Watch this video on YouTube Before many years LEGO has begun as a toy factory, producing simple sets of plastic bricks and parts in order to entertain children.




And stimulate the child brain like many other toys. Now the situation is very improved technologically and some LEGO kits provide internet connectivity, powerful processors, Micro SD card slots and Wi Fi USB slots. These kits stimulate the creativity and the engineering thought inside a young mind, which results in incorporation of parts from several kits and creation of many unique machines. We searched on YouTube for such machines and discovered a lot of them. We selected the coolest 10 and will present them now.The video shows how LEGO made machine is drawing simple forms like rectangles and triangles. It is done by a pencil attached to a platform above the paper. The platform is moved by a regular car wheel.This incredible machine is able to create different shapes from floral foam. For that purpose the user should load a 3D mesh from Autodesk Softimage to the milling machine. After that the drill (the only non-Lego part in the device) processes the foam. After almost two and a half hours of processing we see a beautiful human face as a final result.




8. Ford Shelby GT500 scale model. It is created at scale 1:8 and comprises of roughly 3500 parts. The vehicle weighs 3,1 kilograms and has lockable doors, full set of four seats. When the creator opened the front hood it discovered a plastic replica of the legendary V8 muscle engines. The suspension is similar to a real car with its front McPhersons.This proves that LEGO isn’t just for kids anymore. The device comprises of bottle open up system, bottle conveyor system and bottle cooling system. The beer is ordered via beerREMOTEcontrol, a device connected to the machine via Bluetooth. The ordered beer is forwarded to the open up system and then transported to the cooling system. The practical value of this invention isn’t very high, at least because you can pick the beer from the fridge and open the bottle several times faster than the machine from the video. It is impressive engineering achievement however, and the machine could be used as a prototype of production line or some sort of it.




6. Mobile Robotic Arm. According to the video, the platform is able to scan and find cargo herself. The hand searched and found a box, grabbed and transported it to different point.This is an improved version of the 3D printer that was mentioned above. It makes more complicated shapes and sculptures. 4. Bridge Laying Tank. Made as a scale model of real German tank, it weighs 3.4 kilograms and the bridge is 93 cm long. The video shows how the tank approaches the streamlet, deploys the bridge over and then passes over it to other shore. Then the bridge is folded back to the initial position and the tank is ready to go. 3. Excavator-like Robotic Hand. This robotic hand reminds of an excavator. The hand is navigated and shows some impressive mobility. In the video it attempts unsuccessfully to catch a ball on a cup.This is walking, 70 cm tall and 3.6 kg heavy robot. If this is possible to be made at home with LEGO, there is nothing to wonder around Atlas and the other walking robots made for DARPA.

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