Wrap your head around this concept from builder alanyuppie: A Jaeger Combiner mech, three mechs that combine into one massive mech. Meet MerDeCha, from Malaysia, our newest hope against the scourge of Kaiju. There’s tons of other pics of this imaginative and awesome MOC, click through to check them out. Original linkOriginal author: Tommy
What better place to stand guard during the winter than by a hot spring? The scenery in this diorama by Jaap Bijl truly is something to look at — in fact, perhaps it’s “scenery” that the dwarves are protecting! The builder has used his signature sagging roof style lined with a bit of snow, along with some nice wood construction on the building. While the building uses some new ideas, the star of the show is the hot spring. It uses window pane pieces as the water to make the surface extremely smooth, giving it a great reflection and allowing the deep colours underneath to be seen. These colours continue outwards on the shore in a gentle gradient to the sulfuric yellow that ends under the snow. The post The hottest and coolest guard post appeared first on The Brothers Brick. Original linkOriginal author: Luka
B-Wing fighters are truly under-appreciated vehicles in the arsenal of the Rebel forces in Star Wars and similarly, in the LEGO world, I’ve yet to see a decent build until now. This stunning creation by Patrick Lacroix uses a colour scheme that stands out quite a bit with the red highlights and great use of the blue transparent base parts from the Dimension series which has those RFID tags inbuilt at the exhaust ports. It uses the same style of caterpillar tracks modelled from the LEGO 10227 UCS B-Wing release for the cockpit but in the more common black parts, and the best part that Patrick mentioned is, it rotates as it rightly should so as the main feature! While I wasn’t quite sold on getting a B-Wing to add to my collection, I believe this has changed my mind! The post B is for beauty, and B-Wing Starfighters too appeared...
The summer 2018 LEGO City sets revealed last week feature an exploration team unearthing extinct Pleistocene megafauna like mammoths and saber-toothed cats, preserved in arctic ice. The largest set in the summer wave of City sets, the mobile base has four sections that can be connected, including a trailer for hauling the unfrozen mammoth back to the lab for research. There’s been a lot of excitement among our readers about this upcoming series of LEGO sets, and we’ll be sure to bring you all the details about them as they emerge. In the meantime, enjoy this closer look at the set and its star proboscidean. The post Closer look at the LEGO mammoth in LEGO City 60195 Arctic Mobile Exploration Base [News] appeared first on The Brothers Brick. Original linkOriginal author: Andrew
Jason from JK Brickworks never ceases to impress us with his animated skills of using motors and moving parts to bring a build to life. This time he’s got a Sopwith Camel and Fokker Dr.1 all tuned up and ready for an endless chase. Even without the intricacies of the mechanism, the tiny planes themselves are very swooshable. There’s so much potential to work it into a larger scene or change of theme of the vehicles pursuing one another. As always, Jason’s shared the mechanics for you to construct or modify your very own little scene. Hop over to his excellent video instruction guide! The post An endless dogfight delight with a motorised LEGO creation [Video] appeared first on The Brothers Brick. Original linkOriginal author: Edwinder