lego star wars winter 2014 sets

lego star wars winter 2014 sets

lego star wars winter 2013

Lego Star Wars Winter 2014 Sets

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It’s still another six months to go before the new Star Wars movie, The Force Awakens, arrives in theaters. Lego fans will have new sets to look forward to closer to then, but in the meantime they’ll have to content themselves with some original trilogy action. New this month is the Death Star Final Duel, featuring the iconic scene at the end of Return of the Jedi where Luke Skywalker fights Darth Vader to the death while the sinister Emperor Palpatine looks on. This isn’t the first time the scene has popped up in Lego. It’s also featured in the massive, 3,803-piece Death Star, released in 2008. The new set, however, expands on what was just a small piece of that much bigger whole. Here are nine ways in which the Death Star Final Duel improves on its previous Lego incarnation. The original Death Star’s duel section is rather cramped, with the Emperor’s throne sitting atop a small floor section, across from a collapsible balcony. There’s hardly enough room for the five minifigures: Palpatine, Luke, Vader, and a pair of Imperial Guardsmen.




The 724-piece Death Star Duel features a lot more real estate, with a large staircase leading up to the throne and a retractable drawbridge that leads to sliding doors with their associated guards. A pair of side sections also swing out from the main trunk. The Death Star Final Duel runs $79, a far cry from the whopping $399 price tag of the full Death Star. Of course, the Death Star is perhaps the ultimate Star Wars Lego set, but still, this is a far more affordable chunk. The new Luke Skywalker minifigure has been completely redesigned, so much so that the older Death Star version looks positively ancient. Luke now has more details on his outfit, including a pretty boss belt buckle. His eyes are more two-dimensional, rather than just black dots, and it almost looks like he has a goatee. His hair is also a little more brown than blond. Most importantly, his lightsaber is green, rather than a greenish yellow. The online protests can finally end. Purists will love this one.




Palpatine’s bodyguards are largely unchanged in this new set, except for two slight details that are more faithful to the movie. Gone are the black hands in favor of red, and the black staves have been replaced by two-piece black-and-grey polearms, which look more like what the guardsmen actually carry. Star Wars nerds can sleep easier now that this travesty has been corrected. Who can forget Vader looking for Luke in the movie among the darkness and those weird blue-glowing terminals underneath Palpatine’s throne? They’re under-represented in the cramped quarters of the Death Star set, but here they’re fully realized. We’re still not quite sure what they’re for, but they look cool nevertheless. The Emperor is largely unchanged from the older Death Star, although the new version has a few more details in his robe. His face is no longer a sullen grey but rather a ghoulish flesh tone. He still has the same attachable lightning bolts, which are as inventive a design as Lego creators have ever come up with.




The original Death Star designers deserve kudos for fitting in a collapsable balcony, a key part of the film’s duel segment. But the new set has three such action areas: a fall-away balcony, exploding stairs, and an ejecting floor near the drawbridge. More space equals more action, if you’re into that sort of thing. It’s probably more of a draw for kids. What fun is killing the Emperor off when there’s no electrical shaft to throw him down? The Death Star Final Duel has one, complete with decals that provide all the piping and wiring details on the inside. Now you can replicate your own blood-curdling screams as Vader tosses his boss to his death. Hands-down the new set’s coolest feature is Darth Vader’s two-piece mask. Take the helmet off to reveal the pale, scarred head and face of Anakin Skywalker, so he can say, “Let me look on you with my own eyes.” As an extra bonus, the Death Star Final Duel doesn’t feature George Lucas’s edited-in Anakin ghost at the end.




This is Return of the Jedi as it was meant to be. In Lego form, of course. Brickrolled is a monthly Lego review column by Peter Nowak. You can read about his previous builds here. LucasArts and the LucasArts logo are trademarks of Lucasfilm Ltd. © 2005-2007 Lucasfilm Entertainment Company Ltd. or Lucasfilm Ltd. and TM as indicated. LEGO, the LEGO logo and the Minifigure are trademarks of The LEGO Group. © 2007 The LEGO Group. “PlayStation”, “PS” Family logo and “PSP” are registered trademarks of Sony Computer Entertainment Inc. Memory Stick Duo™ may be required (sold separately). Certain limitations apply to Wi-Fi compatible connectivity. See manual for details. Player responsible for Wi-Fi compatible fees. Microsoft, Xbox, Xbox 360, Xbox Live, the Xbox logos, and the Xbox Live logo are either registered trademarks or trademarks of Microsoft Corporation in the U.S. and/or other countries. TM, ®, Wii and Nintendo DS are trademarks of Nintendo. •November 19, 2014You won't see him on Dancing With the Stars anytime soon, so if you want to see Darth Vader bust a move, you'll have to watch Lego Star Wars: The Yoda Chronicles.




In this exclusive clip, you'll not only get to see the Sith Lord lead a conga line of stormtroopers, you'll also see what Vader's hissy fit — sorry, Sithy fit — looks like."Clash of the Skywalkers" is the last of a four-part series. Disney XD will be re-airing the previous episodes ("Escape from the Jedi Temple," "Race for the Holocrons," and "Raid on Coruscant") ahead of the premiere, but here's the short version:Yoda and the ghost of Obi-Wan decide Luke needs more training because — surprise — he's being immature. They send him to dig up Jedi holocrons (holographic instruction manuals) on Tatooine. Vader gets to them first, and he and the emperor use the information to attack rebel-friendly planets.Photos: 'Star Wars: The Clone Wars' Exclusive Concept ArtLuke is forced to destroy the holocrons rather than let the Empire continue using them. But R2-D2 manages to save one — which happens to feature young Vader himself, Anakin Skywalker.It's Skywalker vs. Skywalker in a big Lego finale — who's got the bricks to come out on top?

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