Toys
Lego Secret Vault Contains All Sets In History
Posted by Gizmodo US Edition at 11:30 AM on June 24, 2008
I have to confess that life hasn't been very good lately. Work around the clock, not enough free time, trying to have kids and crashing badly... all while moving to a country I don't particularly like, away from my best friends and family. Maybe that's why visiting Lego's Memory Lane--the secret vault guarding almost every Lego set ever manufactured--touched me in a way I didn't expect. This wasn't amazement or simple awe. I was already astonished to no end by the tour of the Lego factory. No, this was something else, something bigger than the impressive view of the 4,720 Lego sets inside this lair. These weren't just simple boxes full of bricks. These were tickets to ride a time portal to emotions and simpler days long forgotten.
I didn't know that when I was curiously ogling the oldest sets, from the 1950s. Jette Orduna--the curator for the Idea House, Lego's history museum set in the old family house of the owner, Kjeld Kirk Kristiansen--was explaining the first Lego sets, obviously enjoying my enthusiasm. "Here's the wooden box that some shops around Denmark had, usually hairdressers or general stores" she would say while carefully opening it for me to see its contents, simple red and white bricks without tubes, some of them with windows on them, "they contained individual Lego bricks. Back then, parents bought them regularly to their children, so they could keep expanding their Lego system." Then she would turn her attention to another set, as I kept asking what was this or that. "Yes, it's called 'electronic' because this train could be activated by whistling," she would explain, whistling herself.
I was just enjoying it like an archeologist. Her explanations, the cool box designs, the quick evolution of the first years... I was amazed by the ingenuity of it all, curious about the origins of the myth. But that was it. Just simple curiosity. Until we got to the 1970s.
Knowing my previous comments, Jette went straight to one of the shelves, at the end of the long aisle. She looked up and down, her lips pressed together, concentrated in finding something. While she was doing this I was filming around, eyes wide open, thinking "oh, is that?" and "nah, that can't be... can it?" my excitement growing by the second. It was then when she took out a large rectangular box with yellow sides, saying "a-ha! Here it is."
I turned around and I saw what she had in her hands: the Lego Space Galaxy Explorer.

And then it hit me. Lift off. Godspeed. Boom.
A wave of emotions took control, hitting my head like a Lego Airbus 380. Dozens of images started to appear in my head, Polaroids of Xmas and birthdays that I thought were faded, completely fresh, colour-corrected, and restored by the damn Lucasfilm for a Blu-ray re-release. I could even see the Hollywood quote whores saying "Better than ever!", "The past never looked so good!", and "Five stars!" embossed in silver on the special edition boxed set. There was my mother and father--who built a huge Lego ferris wheel and the Blue Train for us when we were too young to build it, then never stop giving us new sets every year--and then my two brothers and my sister, playing on the rug, building all kind of new and wonderful constructions populated by the strangest creatures. And that smell. The perfect smell of Lego bricks. The boxes I was holding at the memory lane smelt exactly like my childhood.
You know what I'm talking about, those were the days and all that jazz. But for real. Feelings and moments from times when everything was innocent and your only concern was the amount of cocoa in your cereals, your bike, and a big carpet full of Lego bricks.
After that, it was one wave after the other, jumping from Lego Space to Lego Technic to Lego Town to Lego Castle and Lego Pirates and Lego Star Wars. Each set a memory, a particular Kodak moment blurred by the occasional teary eye.
Soon, too soon, it was over. And as I was walking up the stairs, back to the present, slowly letting the past fade back into the treasure chest, I thought: "This must be it. This must be reason why Lego is so loved by almost everyone in the planet." Sure they are fun. The details, the incredible designs, the way you physically touch them, how they make you use both your hands, creativity, and logic. All that is there, all are parts of their universal appeal.
But there's a lot more. Something more fundamental, bigger than the sum of all those qualities. Underneath all that there's a primal connection, something that makes everyone tune into the childhoods when they see the bricks, and get back into brighter, careless moments, even at the subconscious levels.
And thinking that, I joined Jette and Jan in the Real World, with a grin on my face. Life wasn't that bad, after all. Not if something as simple as a coloured brick can make me smile again.
I couldn't think of a better song to go with this story than the Johnny Cash version of Memories Are Made of This, from the album Unchained. Sadness and happiness at the same time, bringing so many other memories on its own. You can buy it at Amazon or the iTunes Music Store. In fact, get the whole album while you are it, because it's amazing (and so are the rest of the American Recordings series).

I have to confess that life hasn't been very good lately. Work around the clock, not enough free time, trying to have kids and crashing badly... all while moving to a country I don't particularly like, away from my best friends and family. Maybe that's why visiting Lego's Memory Lane--the secret vault guarding almost
Comments (AU Comments · US Comments)
Rigor
Posted June 24, 2008 7:05 PM
Wow, I got those exact same sets for Xmas 1980 - Galaxy explorer and the rocket one. Sure brings back great memories...
Chris
Posted June 25, 2008 1:48 PM
No Way... I couldn't believe that pic... I had that very lego set Galaxy Explorer and it was one of my favs...
Neal
Posted June 25, 2008 4:51 PM
Ah, nostalgia. I could spend hours (days, weeks!) amongst those shelves. I still have some of my favourite City and Castle sets from the mid-70s to the early 80s - and have just pulled out that yellow castle you can see in the video. A quick clean up and my son will no doubt be rather pleased (yes, it's 'for' my son... cough, cough). what a toy...
Froosh
Posted June 25, 2008 8:44 PM
Special memories indeed! I was immeasurably pleased to receive a gift from my brother when he moved to the UK a few years ago: A (nearly) complete set of the LEGO we played with as children, including the LEGO Space Galaxy Explorer and Moon Base ... with original instructions.
My 8yo son has deconstructed and rebuilt these many times already, and I look forward the them passing to another generation (wear & tear permitting). When it comes down to it, LEGO is for play not for shelving for eternity.
Anthony
Posted June 25, 2008 10:07 PM
I have that space monorail set. Brought back lots of memories between my friends and I making the cars crash or creating lego rollercoasters :D Best present ever parents!
Mark
Posted June 26, 2008 2:00 PM
Yeah, I remember building Lego Star Wars in the bank whilst Mum was depositing money. It was probably the only time us boys kept still!
scaught
Posted 12:10 PM 24/6/08
Aww, wow. Man.
That pan shot over the uranium search vehicle made me catch my breath. I remember saving $2 allowance a week for weeks to buy that sucker. I was so stoked. [guide.lugnet.com]
scaught
grimorg80
Posted 12:10 PM 24/6/08
Damn... I MUST plan an invasion to that vault..
Unfortunately that won't turn back time for real....
grimorg80
Git Em SteveDave has a crush on the Swedes
Posted 12:09 PM 24/6/08
GLOVES, where are your gloves? Oh, the humanity!!!!
Git Em SteveDave has a crush on the Swedes
Git Em SteveDave has a crush on the Swedes
Posted 12:08 PM 24/6/08
Almost all set, or all sets? I want to go. THIS is where my honeymoon shall be.
Git Em SteveDave has a crush on the Swedes
athingunique
Posted 12:02 PM 24/6/08
How much is admission? And to they have take home tours? I've always wanted every single lego set in the history of lego sets....
athingunique
EL_RIEL
Posted 12:01 PM 24/6/08
AWESOMENES!! BTW that video looks very very nice, new high-bitrate streaming ? FTW!!
EL_RIEL
lpranal
Posted 12:01 PM 24/6/08
Dang. This is the real deal, folks. I've seen cases like those before- at the archives in the Art Institute in Chicago (!) containing millions and millions of dollars of art.
They take their lego preservation VERY seriously, apparenlty.
lpranal
carmen hates the hospital
Posted 12:00 PM 24/6/08
@Kaiser-Machead's Chips Ahoy!: I LOVE LEGO TOO...I will be at your house in 20 minutes...bring a fresh pair of pants.
carmen hates the hospital
Kaiser-Machead's Chips Ahoy!
Posted 11:58 AM 24/6/08
@carmen hates the hospital: Take me with you! Forget nutbastard I love LEGO!
Kaiser-Machead's Chips Ahoy!
Schalliol
Posted 11:57 AM 24/6/08
Thanks for sharing your emotional connection to that time. It takes me back to my time getting these legos too. Very nice.
Schalliol
thechansen
Posted 11:56 AM 24/6/08
This made me happy. I now must make the pilgrimage to Lego myself. Seeing all of those sets that I have fond memories building with my dad... Man I think I might tear up...
thechansen
carmen hates the hospital
Posted 11:55 AM 24/6/08
@Kaiser-Machead's Chips Ahoy!: I think I just came...
Must..GO ..TO ...VAULT!
AHHHH!!!!!!!!!
carmen hates the hospital
qella46021
Posted 11:55 AM 24/6/08
Beautiful. That's all I can say.
qella46021
Kaiser-Machead's Chips Ahoy!
Posted 11:54 AM 24/6/08
I think I just gave birth.
Kaiser-Machead's Chips Ahoy!
judacris
Posted 11:52 AM 24/6/08
Something tells me that there are pieces I "inherited" that belong to the Lego Space Galaxy Explorer. Either that, or some other set in that Space category,
judacris
92BuickLeSabre
Posted 11:44 AM 24/6/08
Wow.
Lego isn't a part of my life any more, so I've mostly been reading these cause I think they're pretty cool, and I always like Jesus' writing. Nothing more.
But the Lego Space Galaxy Explorer. What was it about it that makes me remember it so richly as well, as soon as you showed those pictures. Man it was the greatest. From the texture of the little gray mounds to that cool planetary insignia, to the tiny little rover, to the "clear" lego. it was definitely the first time I had or had seen anything like it.
Yay! Great job Jesus.
92BuickLeSabre
11hawkinst
Posted 11:43 AM 24/6/08
Brilliant! Just watching the video brought back amazing memories. Then, I saw the Lego Space Galaxy Explorer. Time was so much simpler back then. No responsibilities, no job, no bills, only your imagination.
Well done Jesus. Well done.
11hawkinst
Jamaces
Posted 11:40 AM 24/6/08
That is so awsome
Jamaces
CODIFEROUS
Posted 11:34 AM 24/6/08
OH MY GOD
CODIFEROUS
txpunk
Posted 12:30 PM 24/6/08
@jesusdiaz: That's what Nutbastard said.
Opps, was that to far?
txpunk
jesusdiaz
Posted 12:28 PM 24/6/08
@athingunique: You have to be invited in there. It's not available to the public.
jesusdiaz
carmen hates the hospital
Posted 12:27 PM 24/6/08
@txpunk: you said came..and cockpit.
TEHEHEHE
carmen hates the hospital
Adolf
Posted 12:24 PM 24/6/08
Damn Jesus... That almost made me cry (no, seriously)... And I'm not even a Lego fan!
Awesome article!
Adolf
txpunk
Posted 12:21 PM 24/6/08
@92BuickLeSabre:
Before playing the vid, I read the article and came (hey, stop laughing Kaiser and Carmen...that wasn't supposed to be punny. I'm trying to have a "moment") to the Space Galaxy Explorer... my inner dialog was EXACTLY what you wrote. The cockpit lid that flipped up was a staple of many of my creations. The texture of the moonscape! This 1 kit was 80% of my collection, and, along with some "modified" star wars action figures, were my only real indoor toys. Thank you Lego, and grandparents.
txpunk
Nelson
Posted 12:20 PM 24/6/08
I even got a little misty eyed there, but my whole lego hayday is early 90's affair. Pirates, space, underwater, space again, castle revival. The days of "lego maniaaaaaac lego maniac."
*starts seriously considering purchasing the 400$ death star*
Nelson
DJJS
Posted 12:18 PM 24/6/08
Tear. That was beautiful .. : )
@Git Em SteveDave has a crush on the Swedes: i was thinking that to..?
DJJS
GeekyNerdGuy
Posted 12:18 PM 24/6/08
I remember all my castle sets, but geez, I had completely forgotten about the space sets and town center. I'm a little worried what all these resurfaced memories may bring with them.
GeekyNerdGuy
Starcade
Posted 12:17 PM 24/6/08
I remember some of these... ah the memories. I totally feel like going out and buying some legos.
Starcade
sacred_hoops
Posted 12:16 PM 24/6/08
I didn't expect to feel any kind of emotion watching that video but it really was like looking a memories of my childhood. The Space Galaxy Explorer really took me back to many christmas'. Perhaps it was more the music, either way, good job.
sacred_hoops
Nelson
Posted 12:14 PM 24/6/08
This is probably, by far, more important than the Svalbard Global Seed "doomsday" vault.
Nelson
QuipsAhoy
Posted 1:11 PM 24/6/08
You guys need to Lego your childhood! :)
QuipsAhoy
Toshie
Posted 1:06 PM 24/6/08
Great story!
BTW, which country is Jesus moving to? Or should that be WCWJMT?
Toshie
ab3
Posted 12:57 PM 24/6/08
Do they control the humidity/temp in that room cause those old boxes are still perfect, not faded at all. And I'd love to know what all of those are worth!!
ab3
Canoehead
Posted 12:56 PM 24/6/08
The Lego Space Galaxy Explorer was my first set of Space Lego - I'd had some town and cowboy stuff before, but that is where it really belong. All (most of?) the parts for it are still in my parent's basement somewhere, waiting to be inherited by the next generation. Speaking of which, hang in there on the munchkin front - it's really odd how for about 18 years you can pray to god that the person you have sex with won't become preggers, and then suddently you are praying for the opposite.
Canoehead
atuck
Posted 12:54 PM 24/6/08
You actually choked me up, jesus.
thanks
atuck
mcdonnr
Posted 12:51 PM 24/6/08
The castle, the second one with the green base & gate for the dragon... that was my first *big* set. It was always the same: I'd get a big set on Christmas, and spend the entire day building it, ignoring all of my relatives and being mopey when we had to go to a relative's because I wasn't building.
That video just about made me cry, man.
Brilliant!
mcdonnr
magiceraserss
Posted 12:39 PM 24/6/08
Dude, that was such a well written article. I totally mirror the emotions that was brought upon. Lego truly was a time immemorial. It was the best of times, it was the simplest of times...
magiceraserss
aratuk
Posted 12:39 PM 24/6/08
I am now planning my next great heist.
aratuk
carmen hates the hospital
Posted 1:41 PM 24/6/08
I think all of you were choking up b.c of the Johnny Cash song...he chokes me up too.
carmen hates the hospital
mariogalaxyman
Posted 1:30 PM 24/6/08
@Nelson: I'm with you, that pirate ship really brought me back.
mariogalaxyman
DeadWriter
Posted 1:28 PM 24/6/08
Looking at the sets online, I am reminded that my parents must have gone with out amenities to get me most of those sets. I know we didn't have a lot of money to go around, but my parents were big on getting my sister and I the best learning toys and experiences that they could.
I think I am going to give them a call and thank them again.
DeadWriter
D0rk
Posted 1:25 PM 24/6/08
As a person who grew up with more LEGO's than I could ever want, and arguably the reason I enjoy the interests and career path i'm on now, I have to say that seeing some of those sets again have reminded me of how much they've shaped me as a person.
D0rk
CEOself
Posted 1:21 PM 24/6/08
I feel like a virgin again
CEOself
DeadWriter
Posted 1:21 PM 24/6/08
I can still remember chewing on the plastic tires.
DeadWriter
DeadWriter
Posted 1:19 PM 24/6/08
My first set after Duplo was the, Space Cuiser And Moonbase. I hated the base plates and the minifigs, and now have a great deal of nostalgia for all of the space sets, base plates included.
DeadWriter
nutbastard
Posted 2:18 PM 24/6/08
@Kaiser-Machead's Chips Ahoy!:
@carmen hates the hospital:
both of you are in so much trouble it's not even funny... STOP LAUGHING I SAID IT'S NOT FUNNY. no - HEY stop that! I swear to god you kiss her one more - ah ah ok, i see how it is, dont you - NO don't you dare - kaiser! kaiser put your pants on right now. I am completely serious mister don't you - oh you're going to be sorry put that thing away - KAISER put it away - im gonna - no don't you - kaiser put it away. OK i swear to god kaiser stop fucking her this instant or im going to, you will be so grounded mister. ah ah. you better get off that this moment kaiser lawrence machead!
nutbastard
nutbastard
Posted 2:14 PM 24/6/08
@txpunk:
i didnt say it, but that doesnt make it untrue! you are correct sir, to go in there, you have to be... me.
nutbastard
DestroyerMTL
Posted 1:52 PM 24/6/08
My God man, what a trip down memory lane.
Thank you for that.
DestroyerMTL
RoninianHoon
Posted 1:47 PM 24/6/08
Bliss!
RoninianHoon
FredicvsMaximvs
Posted 2:49 PM 24/6/08
I think I actually gasped at the picture of the Galaxy Explorer. Wow, that was the pinnacle of Space Lego for me! I also had that rocket launching station, and a couple other assorted kits. Plus some of the bigger Technic kits - man, I loved those!
Here's the thing though: I still have all the pieces and parts, but the assembly manuals are lost to the vagaries of time. Anybody know where I might find copies, perhaps online somewhere? I'd love to reassemble those kits! (Hell, I could probably make a pretty good stab at it with just a good look at the boxes!)
Thanks, Jesus, for bringing back some of the wonderment of childhood!
FredicvsMaximvs
ThisIsSharksTerriroty
Posted 2:46 PM 24/6/08
is any1 else almost worried that this story has been up for like almost 3 hours and LindsayJoy has not expressed her probably SUUUPER excitement on this? no? no one else? i'm now a creepy stalker? oh well.
ThisIsSharksTerriroty
johnnyabnormal
Posted 2:45 PM 24/6/08
My kids will be raised on legos, lincoln logs and easy access to plenty of musical instruments.
johnnyabnormal
johnnyabnormal
Posted 2:43 PM 24/6/08
@nutbastard: What a peanut gallery this has turned into. :)
johnnyabnormal
carmen hates the hospital
Posted 2:42 PM 24/6/08
@nutbastard: ....Did i just have sex with the boys of the GIZ?!....uh oh
carmen hates the hospital
pardyhardy
Posted 2:27 PM 24/6/08
THIS CHANGES EVERYTHING! EVERYTHING! MY WHOLE WORLD IS MEANINGLESS NOW
pardyhardy
prouted
Posted 3:46 PM 24/6/08
I can't believe it !! You manage to bring back some really old memories !!! (I though that part of my brain was gone in smoke).
This is excellent !!! Anthology !!! Thanks for bringing this video to us ;)
prouted
YouandWhoseArmy
Posted 3:19 PM 24/6/08
YESSSSS It ended with the FUTRON MONORAIL! I still have that sucker with like 95+% of the pieces.
YouandWhoseArmy
Skorpius
Posted 3:16 PM 24/6/08
I too actually got a little teary eyed at this. Well done Jesus. This is one of the finest posts on Giz.
Skorpius
mangochutney
Posted 4:12 PM 24/6/08
Man I would like to go there. Thanks for the impressions Jesus.
In that video I even saw the first set of LEGO I ever got:
The LEGO City Fire Department. It was in 1987, Christmas and I was four years old. I played with LEGO before, but that set was mine and I built it alone!
Good times.
mangochutney
jiminycrow
Posted 4:02 PM 24/6/08
Galaxy Space Explorer is...
When you're finally done and you put the box next to it on the floor. You get his leg just right. You close one eye, and it matches up. The smooth surfaces of the custom pieces... the engines and the canopy. The decals. The pictures you take with the hand cranked camera. My Mom, Dad, and sister leaning in behind, smiling. Casey Kasem counts them down from 100. After a few weeks it's time for a custom fleet. One streamlined prototype devolves into a small fleet of basic ships, then back to the original, made now from memory and the box photograph. Swivel the head inside the helmet to hide the face and suddenly the men are more dramatic and elusive. Misplaced pieces under-foot in a shag rug. Bee stings and 10-speed girl bikes. Falling from the magnolia tree in front of the girl next door. M*A*S*H reruns after school and tuning in Mork & Mindy live at 8 on the radio of the Dart, driving home to Dad's after dinner at Mom's.
jiminycrow
Pope John Peeps II
Posted 4:46 PM 24/6/08
your only concern was the amount of cocoa in your cereals, your bike, and a big carpet full of Lego bricks
why are you putting cocoa on your bike, and in your bag full of lego bricks?
@carmen hates the hospital:
Okay, I guess I'm the only one who's going to voice this out loud, but seriously... The last lego thread got seriously icky thumpy because of the men salivating over that avatar pic with the tits, and treating Giz like any other retarded internet forum.
This one's getting a little icky because of the girls this time. Look girls. Everyone loves sex and everyone loves to flirt. But you can't just throw the shit out there all the time to trawl for replies. if you're going to do it, do it right and do it funny. If you want some help look up gawker commenter Collegecallgirl.
@nutbastard: Eww man. Eww. Seriously. Eww. Just. Eww.
Pope John Peeps II
CODIFEROUS
Posted 4:44 PM 24/6/08
Wow, you guys have really lost all the late night writers, haven't you?
CODIFEROUS
carmen hates the hospital
Posted 5:10 PM 24/6/08
@Pope John Peeps II: Uhm...get over it.
carmen hates the hospital
LindsayJoy's MBP is into S+M
Posted 4:52 PM 24/6/08
You know, I dugg this and posted a comment about this hours ago. But alas. It is not here.
Anyways, I said that this truly made me cry.
Not because I had the monorail set, or the pirate set that was in the video, but because the article had so much meaning and was so heart-felt. The music meant so much to me.
So much love, so many feelings.
I think it was even more memorable the second time.
LindsayJoy's MBP is into S+M
Mr.Wilson
Posted 5:43 PM 24/6/08
Aww, how cute! I even think the train my uncle had that introduced me to Legos was that last box shown! Well, I'm glad you picked that song, since I'm thinking of something that can get me teary eyed just hearing a specific version of it (though it seems random for Legos, but I heard a musicbox version in a toystore and it seemed so fitting). Now you've made me want to find my old Legos in my toy containers and get some new sets!
Mr.Wilson
Dapole
Posted 5:43 PM 24/6/08
@Pope John Peeps II: bahahaha. I read giz because I enjoy the gadget/tech style comments, but I also enjoy when stuff just gets ridiculous like this. It makes everything a bit less serious, and makes for a much more interesting and uneven, if you will, read. So there is an easy solution, if you don't like the turn a thread of comments is taking, there is another post right around the corner.
Dapole
VishusBurn
Posted 5:37 PM 24/6/08
Nerdgasmed just now BTW.
VishusBurn
Dapole
Posted 5:36 PM 24/6/08
@Pope John Peeps II: personally this is just hilarious, I mean do you expect gizmodo to be your personal little paradise. Enjoy the ridiculousness of the conversations and have a good laugh!
@carmen hates the hospital: fo shizzle!
Dapole
Pope John Peeps II
Posted 5:30 PM 24/6/08
@carmen hates the hospital: Jeebus, is that seriously your answer?
Listen, I love reading Giz, and I love the comments here. I also hate myspace. Like everyone should. Please stop confusing Gizmodo with your Myspace page.
Pope John Peeps II
npa191
Posted 6:05 PM 24/6/08
I really miss legos...
npa191
carmen hates the hospital
Posted 6:45 PM 24/6/08
@Pope John Peeps II: You shouldn't act so smart b.c you end up looking like an ass. I don't do myspace or any of that shit. Take life easier, you won't die so young.
carmen hates the hospital
kingdom2000
Posted 7:07 PM 24/6/08
Wow, that was a walk. I actually owned the two space sets (the spacecraft and the rocket launcher) as a kid. I think I still have the pieces in my grandma's attic. I also had a few castle sets but nothing the video showed.
And the train sets. I remember wanting to get them but never got around to it, cause the money kept going to NES games. Wow, if I could take the money I have now, hand it myself back then with the advice "go, buy, have a ton of fun." Sigh, its probably things like this that causes us to spoil the next generation more then the one that came before.
kingdom2000
desostros
Posted 7:05 PM 24/6/08
And thats two posts for the both of you !!
(seriously the comment system has to be fixed please :P )
desostros
desostros
Posted 7:04 PM 24/6/08
@Pope John Peeps II:
@carmen hates the hospital:
Wowowow calm down now...these are just comments...
I dont post many comments but I usually read them all, and you've both made me chuckle my ass off at work!
Thanks for that!
But i do feel that Pope John has a point,Carmen. You seem to hijack every topic for a chance to post a totally off-topic sexually loaded message, most of the time to (the lucky bastard) kaizer.
Sometimes a little flirt can be fun ;) i've read your comments countless times and went "Rawr", you tease :P
But maybe keep it a little more ontopic please?
THe article was beautifully written Jezus, the vid was amazing...brought back a lot of memories!
I kinda feel good that i've always forbidden my mom to give my lego's away !
desostros
desostros
Posted 7:02 PM 24/6/08
@Pope John Peeps II:
@carmen hates the hospital:
Wowowow calm down now...these are just comments...
I dont post many comments but I usually read them all, and you've both made me chuckle my ass off at work!
Thanks for that!
But i do feel that Pope John has a point,Carmen. You seem to hijack every topic for a chance to post a totally off-topic sexually loaded message, most of the time to (the lucky bastard) kaizer.
Sometimes a little flirt can be fun ;) i've read your comments countless times and went "Rawr", you tease :P
But maybe keep it a little more ontopic please?
THe article was beautifully written Jezus, the vid was amazing...brought back a lot of memories!
I kinda feel good that i've always forbidden my mom to give my lego's away !
desostros
Purple Dave
Posted 7:48 PM 24/6/08
Screw the Galaxy Explorer. I want the Renegade, the Camoflaged Outpost, and a big box with a decent assortment of Monorail track.
@jesusdiaz:
Indeed, and for good reason. Some of those sets go for huge amounts of money _used_. A guy could retire off of what could be earned by selling off that collection, and the only way they're going to stay in such pristine condition is if they're stored in a climate-controlled environment with the lights _off_. Doesn't work very well for public viewing.
Anyways, one of the world's two foremost LEGO historians once got the opportunity to tour the vault, and he was finding early sets down there that noone in the AFOL community had ever even heard of. Granted, these were sets of the sort that very few people besides the two foremost LEGO historians would really care about, but still...
Purple Dave
Kaiser-Machead's Chips Ahoy!
Posted 8:11 PM 24/6/08
@nutbastard: Bwaaa???
All I wanted was LEGO! LEGO DAMMIT
Kaiser-Machead's Chips Ahoy!
arnar
Posted 9:02 PM 24/6/08
I thought you were going a little overboard in describing the nostalgic feelings, and then I saw the fire station and I felt like I was 8 years old yesterday.
arnar
PastorDoodah
Posted 8:33 PM 24/6/08
The aliens are going to find this vault and spend a long, long time thinking now just w t *f* is all of this?
PastorDoodah
highhopes2006
Posted 8:29 PM 24/6/08
Johnny Cash is a legend,
thanks for the video, great memories, and thanks for putting such a great song
highhopes2006
GHETTO.CHiLD
Posted 9:40 PM 24/6/08
How much do you suppose some lake front property goes for in Lego City?
GHETTO.CHiLD
gloveofpower
Posted 9:19 PM 24/6/08
Behold the awe inspiring, jaw dropping masterpiece of the Black Seas Barracuda! There was this rich kid I used to hang out with as a child... I had received the Caribbean Clipper as a christmas gift one year and I was going positively bonkers over it. I took it over to his house to play Pirates with his Forbidden Fortress set and what does he whip out that HE got for xmas? The muthafuckin flagship of them all, the Black Seas Barracuda. Holy balls I don't think I have ever been that wantonly and degenerately jealous of any physical object ever in my life before or since then. If I had believed I could have gotten away with beating him up and jackin that shit, I would have done it faster than you can say "865 bricks". My jealousy quickly gave way to amazement and rapture as we spent the whole day playing with it, ending with me being forcibly dragged home. Two decades later this ship remains still too expensive for me to buy, available as a collector's wet dream on eBay for $500, buy it now.
gloveofpower
gloveofpower
Posted 9:09 PM 24/6/08
Behold the awe inspiring, jaw dropping masterpiece of the Black Seas Barracuda! There was this rich kid I used to hang out with as a child... I had received the Caribbean Clipper as a christmas gift one year and I was going positively bonkers over it. I took it over to his house to play Pirates with his Forbidden Fortress set and what does he whip out that HE got for xmas? The muthafuckin flagship of them all, the Black Seas Barracuda. Holy balls I don't think I have ever been that wantonly and degenerately jealous of any physical object ever in my life before or since then. If I had believed I could have gotten away with beating him up and jackin that shit, I would have done it faster than you can say "865 bricks". My jealousy quickly gave way to amazement and rapture as we spent the whole day playing with it, ending with me being forcibly dragged home. A decade later this ship remains still too expensive for me to buy, available as a collector's wet dream on eBay for $500, buy it now.
gloveofpower
MastaFalse
Posted 10:25 PM 24/6/08
Yeah, I remember every Christmas morning, getting that new Lego set--and I never did get one of those enormous sets--and spending half the day slowly building it, and then wanting to build more environments so I'd find another set and go from there. That happened until I threw all my Legos in a huge box and mixed 'em together. My mom even thinks the Legos are sacred. She won't throw them away, like all the other crap I've had.
MastaFalse
Vitamin_G
Posted 2:19 PM 24/6/08
Wow. I've been reading Gizmodo, and some of the other Gawker sites for a long time now and have never really felt a desire to comment, but reading Jesus' article brought a wave of emotion over me and I need to say thanks. As a former LEGO-er and new father this article took me back to my childhood and made me flashforward to what I want my own son to experience...all at the same time!
Vitamin_G
lpranal
Posted 11:29 PM 24/6/08
@gloveofpower: DUDE I had the same set! it was freaking BA! Yeah the barracuda would have ruled, but I consoled myself with the fact that while the barracuda would have pwned the clipper in a straight on naval engagement, it was WAY more maneuverable and could have totally blasted that shit in any kind of treacherous waters. And Pretty much all my creations after that point had cannons involved, in some way.
lpranal
XM8500
Posted 11:27 PM 24/6/08
*sigh* I remember what I wanted to do when I was younger: I slept in a bunk bed and my brother had moved out YEARS ago so I had the upper bunk to do whatever I wanted.
The plan was to build a lego city up there...the memories are coming back to me, time to dig that trusty plastic tub out of my room and build something again!
XM8500
Conchas
Posted 8:37 PM 24/6/08
Have seen a lot of photos, but never such a video.
It's... have no words to describe the emotions such a trip may raise inside us!...
However always wondered that LEGO allows the vault visitors to handle this treasures. Quite not usual, as inevitably they will get more shelfware.
This a vault, not even a museum. ;)
However if someday I manage to get there, it will be a pleasure to touch a few of them that most fill my good memories.
[www.TechnicBRICKs.blogsopt.com]
Conchas
U_eriksen
Posted 4:59 PM 24/6/08
I grew up in a town about 20-30km from Billund, the home town of Lego.
I remember at age 6-7(?) I was part of a 'beta test' where I got one of the first space sets on loan for a month or so, and after completing some kind of survey I got a big gas station model for free! Still have it, along with the fire station I got the next Christmas.
I also remember a big red plastic box full of old, mixed Lego bricks that my older brother had used (with a 9-year age difference, there was a number of years where the bricks weren't played with). Lots of pieces from the old sets were missing, so I was never able to put together the jumbo jet or the wagon from the black train. But now I know what that black whistle was for (from the video)... I mostly remember it as being very shrill and prone to dripping saliva quite quickly.
And I remember the lego trains that would rarely run, because we didn't have any batteries for them (they were very expensive). Today, we can quite easily buy Lego toys and batteries and whatever for our kids, but I am not completely sure that it is a good thing. Some parts of my brain tend to think that lacking (and really wishing for) something, like particular toys or even batteries for them,
is an important part of growing up. Disappointment and long-time wishes only make for more intense (and fond) memories of the Christmas or birthday where you finally got that particular present that you will always remember.
Anyway, I have been to Legoland in Billund more times than I can remember, and even today my own kids just love going there. And for some reason they are more attracted to the 'mini land' with all kinds of scale models of towns, landscapes and special buildings than they are attracted to the rides in the park. My 4-year-old son has a blast running around the models while trying to figure out which tunnels the running trains will appear from next...
Nice video and nice article. Childhood memories are hard to put into words, but you did a good job capturing some of those special feelings from a time when everything was simpler...
U_eriksen
U_eriksen
Posted 4:08 PM 24/6/08
Regarding assembly instructions:
You do, of course, all know about this site?
[www.hccamsterdam.nl]
Enjoy!
U_eriksen
duuktoprock
Posted 12:19 PM 24/6/08
Wow Giz, you sure know how to make a grown man cry!
This brings back so many memories of hrs on hrs of boyish glee, not just playing, but oogling over the Lego catalogs that come in all the boxes, wish for the money to buy all the sets. Makes me want to dig out my old box again.
ps: i've been a reader for awhile, but this made me just have to post. Thanks for the video, I always wandered if that room existed!
duuktoprock
clearbox
Posted 12:04 AM 25/6/08
Thanks for the memories Gizmodo! Wow - the yellow Lego castle set I used to own as a kid!
Those were some good times for me!!!
clearbox
dOk
Posted 11:57 PM 24/6/08
They really should just forget all that market research and start reissuing all of those sets a few a year...
Especially the ones in the wooden containers.
dOk
Mazda Plainview
Posted 11:51 PM 24/6/08
this post makes me ridiculously happy :)
Mazda Plainview
lpranal
Posted 11:50 PM 24/6/08
@graphx: you're thinking of aquazone?
[guide.lugnet.com]
lpranal
stretta
Posted 11:46 PM 24/6/08
All the best iconic sets in the video. Well chosen, especially from that late 70s period.
My son with my Galaxy Explorer, reconstructed and complete after decades:
[66.92.94.107]
How many toys from your childhood get passed down to your kids?
stretta
graphx
Posted 11:38 PM 24/6/08
oh wow i remember the castle with the ghost in it!!! i wanted it so bad but those huge sets were only for special occasions like christmas or birthdays. remember the pirate sets too!!!! i think my favorite though was the underwater series that they did (don't remember the name) but it had two sides, bad and good. the had little magnets on the arms of ships and could pick up crystals in little clear orange boxes. i cant remember the name of that set though.. anyone know? (the "bad" side also had almost like a shark look on the front of the ships.
graphx
FredicvsMaximvs
Posted 12:21 AM 25/6/08
@U_eriksen: No, I didn't! Thanks!
FredicvsMaximvs
superbryant
Posted 12:20 AM 25/6/08
you just back a lot of memories....wow I'm almost in tears sitting in my office. I remember dumping all my Lego bricks in the middle of my room and just building. And how everyday at dinner I'd come out of my room and show the family what my current project was. I still haven't gotten all of them off my floor (every once in a while waking up in the middle of the night and stepping one hard plastic piece of my past).......sigh good times.... :)
superbryant
LastVigilante
Posted 1:53 AM 25/6/08
Damn. Now I really wish I didn't give my big box of all my Legos to my girlfriend's little brother. He's probably losing pieces and intermingling his cheap Lego knockoffs with mine. For shame.
Actually, I just want the Space Shuttle back, that was my favorite (the first version is what I had). Even over the Deep Sea Barracuda I had, the Shuttle was still my favorite.
LastVigilante
U_eriksen
Posted 1:42 AM 25/6/08
For those of you needing assembly manuals:
[www.hccamsterdam.nl]
Enjoy!
U_eriksen
U_eriksen
Posted 1:40 AM 25/6/08
arrrhhh
U_eriksen
IVPPITER
Posted 1:24 AM 25/6/08
Amen
IVPPITER
f0rge
Posted 1:17 AM 25/6/08
i cant wait to have kids so i can play again
f0rge
ADM
Posted 1:14 AM 25/6/08
looks like i'm a little late to this party, but here are some scans i recently made of old lego manuals:
[www.scribd.com]
i have a bunch more to do soon.
ADM
Kharnellius
Posted 12:45 AM 25/6/08
The amount of self discipline needed to not go down there one day and just start tearing away would be overwhelming!!!!
I would HAVE to have an armed escort any time I wanted to visit.
Building is best part of it...to see them be boxed up like...ugh...*tear*. It's like seeing your own children being locked up and away forever.
Kharnellius
halfkorean
Posted 12:43 AM 25/6/08
backinthedaywheniwasyoungi'mnotakidanymorebutsomedaysisitandwishiwasakidagain.
Perhaps the best article yet!?
halfkorean
Alluvian
Posted 12:38 AM 25/6/08
Wow, makes me proud to say that my Lego Space Explorer set (and that rocket set also pictured above, and the MOONBASE with the MONORAIL, remember that one too? All together you got 4 of the cool moonscape ground pieces) are currently in the best place possible.
The posession of my 8 year old nephew!
He also has a TON of starwars sets, but I am glad to know he got his lego start PROPERLY with my old legos consisting strongly of the space explorer sets.
Man I loved that little moon buggy! And the serrated long pieces that the top of the monorail was made out of. And what better pieces were there than those space explorer wing parts?
Alluvian
Jordan Lund
Posted 2:45 AM 25/6/08
Wow, I had set #928!
Jordan Lund
ASCurtis
Posted 2:34 AM 25/6/08
This particular article brings back a familiar quote. Ladies and Gentlenerds, Mr. Inspectah Deck.
"I bomb atomically, Socrates' philosophies
and hypothesis can't define how I be droppin these
mockeries, lyrically perform armed robbery
Flee with the lottery, possibly they spotted me
Battle-scarred shogun, explosion when my pen hits
tremendous, ultra-violet shine blind forensics I inspect you, through the future see millenium
Killa B's sold fifty gold sixty platinum"
A gem for those in the know. Oh and can you idiots stop complaining and just agree that LEGO kicks ass, and always will?! I'm sick of this Xbox live-esque toughtalk...
ASCurtis
Dr.Remulak
Posted 2:33 AM 25/6/08
Well, Well Well...Talk about a waste of space-untouched colored plastic junk stored for eons in climate controlled rooms??? WHAT THE "F"? I have never seen such expensive plastic junk in my life! When we were kids we played with WOOD blocks and Lincoln Logs! I say melt it all down and make something useful out of it all, like waste baskets or something. This Lego shit is out of control, they are like a kiddie drug, like the tyke huffing on that train whistle, little colored beans that smell like you can eat them! Don't forget the choking hazzard!
Dr.Remulak
moose_knuckle
Posted 2:02 AM 25/6/08
"Each set a memory, a particular Kodak moment blurred by the occasional teary eye."
God just reading the article made me start tearing up
moose_knuckle
Adam Rock
Posted 3:41 AM 25/6/08
Black Monarch's Castle. I was like 5. Best set ever, age related of course.
Adam Rock
Ariel_Wollinger
Posted 2:49 AM 25/6/08
FANTASTIC!! The envy!! argh!!!
Ariel_Wollinger
kodo
Posted 5:59 AM 25/6/08
*wipes tears from face*
kodo
Dr. Spaceman, Esq.
Posted 5:55 AM 25/6/08
Cries tear of joy
Dr. Spaceman, Esq.
kps9727
Posted 5:51 AM 25/6/08
Did anyone else ever get a space man head stuck in a space helmet and go crazy trying to figure out how to get it out?
Thanks for the memories Jesus!
kps9727
drunknbass
Posted 5:49 AM 25/6/08
this has to be the best article you've ever written. nice work
drunknbass
zyberteq
Posted 5:44 AM 25/6/08
As I was watching the movie, I felt this sudden rush of nostalgia. And after that the article... beautiful.
Also... I'm going to Legoland (denmark) this weekend!! finally!!!
(first time ever and i'm already 26 :P )
I am thouroughly going to enjoy every second of it :D
zyberteq
stonefry
Posted 5:40 AM 25/6/08
Put your kids through college? Those sets could put "Jon and Kate +8's" kids through college.
stonefry
permissionmag
Posted 5:36 AM 25/6/08
Best Gizmodo article ever.
Ever.
Seriously. This one goes right at the front of the hardcover version when you print it.
permissionmag
Jonathan21
Posted 5:27 AM 25/6/08
Wow thanks Jesus for brining back some good memories :)
Jonathan21
Pixelantes Anonymous
Posted 5:25 AM 25/6/08
I remember those space explorer sets! My family was poor when I was a kid, but somehow me and my brother had a few of those to play with. I remember making all kinds of weird rockets from the combined sets.
Another big favorite of mine was the Lego City police and fire truck legos. We had this awesome rug (not made by Lego) that had like a city grid on it me and my brother used to drive all around with the little trucks and pretend to chase robbers with our police cars.
Awesome article! Legos rule!
Oh, to be a child again. Maybe my 7-month-old daughter will bring me "back" once she starts playing with toys like these.
Pixelantes Anonymous
carmen hates the hospital
Posted 5:16 AM 25/6/08
Memories...like the corners of my mind
i'm having lego water colored memories
of the way they were....
carmen hates the hospital
tegronin
Posted 5:12 AM 25/6/08
sooo many memories
it was a good time to grow up, in the late 70's early 80's... legos, heman, gi joe, transformers, the entire line of star wars toys (the real ones)...
water guns and cap guns that looked real...
atari...
tegronin
Delmarc
Posted 5:02 AM 25/6/08
all i have to say is thank you for doing this article... i read gizmodo alot and nothing hit me as hard as this has... I remember getting some of those sets... like near photographic memory of me getting them... those sets were as big as the Sega Genesis I got on my bday... when it first came out...
there are very few things in which most people get in their lives that i bet they can remember minute by minute when they got those things...
Delmarc
stignordas
Posted 4:45 AM 25/6/08
Lovely story, thanks Gizmodo! Please consider giving your cameraman a brief lesson on holding the camera steady, it would help us all. Great story!
stignordas
kid814
Posted 4:39 AM 25/6/08
wow , this is just amazing
i had the lego pirate when i was young
i finished it and put it on the tv in my house,
but it fell one day (i think it was cuz of an earthquake)
i think i still have the pieces some where in my house..
kid814
vmspionage
Posted 4:30 AM 25/6/08
Let's break in Ocean's 11 style and put them all together.
vmspionage
Karinabob
Posted 4:10 AM 25/6/08
This was lovely. I can remember playing with my Legos when I was little with my brother....oh, such wonderful memories. Very heartfelt, Jesus, well played sir.
Karinabob
dorylomorphs
Posted 3:57 AM 25/6/08
This is amazing.. thanks gizmodo..
dorylomorphs
Adam Rock
Posted 3:53 AM 25/6/08
Adam Rock
jesusdiaz
Posted 7:48 AM 25/6/08
@Purple Dave: The current worldwide ranking, according to Lego, is:
1. City.
2. Bionicle.
3. Star Wars.
According to what they told me there, City has always been the number one worldwide seller.
jesusdiaz
Purple Dave
Posted 6:41 AM 25/6/08
Okay, I do have one question regarding the text flashes in the video. It says that LEGO City remains the #1 best-seller, but that has to be over the life of the theme and not on a year-by-year basis, right? Because sometime around 5-6 years ago I remember hearing that the top four themes at the time, in order, were:
1. BIONICLE
2. Star Wars
3. Creator (stuff like the tubs and Designer sets)
4. Harry Potter
I expect City/Town/whatever it was called at the time came in at #5 because they didn't have any other really big licensed themes, and they also didn't really have much in the way of their more fantastical original themes at the time (Space was still out due to Star Wars, Castle was out as well due to Harry Potter, Pirates was long gone, Vikings wasn't out yet, and I believe Adventurers was on the verge of ending).
Purple Dave
Bender
Posted 6:36 AM 25/6/08
@kps9727: Absolutely! It was like a right of passage if you could figure out how to do it.
There's a ton of really good memories in those pictures. Those space sets, and the early castle sets where you had to build your horses...man, I feel old.
Bender
jesusdiaz
Posted 8:57 AM 25/6/08
@Falleen9: Wait until you see what I have in store for this week for the true Area 51 feeling.
jesusdiaz
Palestina
Posted 8:53 AM 25/6/08
W=O=W
I totally could die locked inside this thing!
Palestina
Falleen9
Posted 8:34 AM 25/6/08
It has a hint of the Indiana Jones Warehouse to it. Especially for those really awesome Lego sets like the new Death Star Play set or the Ultimate Collectors Series Millenium Falcon.
Falleen9
Turtlestack
Posted 9:44 AM 25/6/08
I loved The Lego Space Galaxy Explorer! I remember building it on a super hot summer afternoon when my best friend was away at camp.
Oh God, the memories!
Turtlestack
discounteggroll
Posted 9:17 AM 25/6/08
Maui Wowie!
discounteggroll
-Core-
Posted 10:20 AM 25/6/08
There's a trip down memory lane. There was one thing that came before gaming, and do you know what that was? It was LEGOS... Oh how I miss those days.
-Core-
bizhistories
Posted 11:10 AM 25/6/08
Here's a cool random fact for all you Lego nerds...did you know that three 8-studded lego bricks can be combined in 1,060 ways?
Lego's rock - look at this website to read about why this company's gonna dominate the plastic toy industry well into the 21st century.
[www.fundinguniverse.com]
bizhistories
vitamincm
Posted 11:53 AM 25/6/08
Wow,
I played with Legos as a child and I had my daughter play with them.
This was like seeing all of my childhood / adult dreams in one place.
Thanks
vitamincm
bnsqueak
Posted 12:50 PM 25/6/08
I have that spaceship set!
bnsqueak
Purple Dave
Posted 4:42 PM 25/6/08
@jesusdiaz:
This was what I was told in the LEGO showroom at NYTF, during one of my three visits between 2002-2004. Star Wars and Harry Potter were new enough themes to be running really strong, and BIONICLE was selling so strong during its first year that they had to set up a completely new line to manufacture parts just to keep up with demand (at a time when the company as a whole was actually losing money for, I believe, the second year in their entire history). Harry Potter has since dropped to the point where the only OotP set released was a third Hogwarts Castle (putting it well out of the price range of what most families would buy), Star Wars is still doing well but isn't riding the success of a recent movie, and a lot of the kids who made BIONICLE such a smash success have grown out of the whole toy thing (like Pokemon, it's still around and doing well, but the fire is no longer raging out of control). And, more importantly, at the time Town was getting some pretty janky sets. All the trainheads in my club perked up within the last two years, in spite of the knowledge that the 9v Train system is effectively dead.
@jesusdiaz:
It better be the revelation that they're going to make an Indiana Jones flying wing set. After seeing that in the video game, I'm even more eager to see it released in plastic form.
Purple Dave
U_eriksen
Posted 4:58 PM 25/6/08
I grew up in a town about 20-30km from Billund, the home town of Lego, Denmark.
I remember at age 6-7(?) I was part of a 'beta test' where I got one of the first space sets on loan for a month or so, and after completing some kind of survey I got a big gas station model for free! Still have it, along with the awesome fire station (#374 from 1978) I got the next Christmas.
I also remember a big red plastic box full of old, mixed Lego bricks that my older brother had used (with a 9-year age difference, there was a number of years where the bricks weren't played with). Lots of pieces from the old sets were missing, so I was never able to put together the jumbo jet or the wagon from the black train. But now I know what that black whistle was for (from the video)... I mostly remember it as being very shrill and prone to dripping saliva quite quickly.
And I remember the lego trains that would rarely run, because we didn't have any batteries for them (they were very expensive). Today, we can quite easily buy Lego toys and batteries and whatever for our kids, but I am not completely sure that it is a good thing. Some parts of my brain tend to think that lacking (and really wishing for) something, like particular toys or even batteries for them,
is an important part of growing up. Disappointment and long-time wishes only make for more intense (and fond) memories of the Christmas or birthday when you finally got that particular present that you will always remember.
Anyway, I have been to Legoland in Billund more times than I can remember, and even today my own kids just love going there. And for some reason they are more attracted to the 'mini land' with all kinds of scale models of towns, landscapes and special buildings than they are attracted to the rides in the park. My 4-year-old son has a blast running around the models while trying to figure out which tunnels the running trains will appear from next...
The last box I bought for my son is the Star Wars B-Wing (the newer one, #6208). So far he is a bit too young to put the models together himself, but luckily his dad will help :) And not a day goes by where he doesn't beg to be allowed to play some more Lego Star Wars on the PC.
Nice video and nice article. Childhood memories are hard to put into words, but you did a good job capturing some of those special feelings from a time when everything was simpler...
U_eriksen
Purple Dave
Posted 6:52 PM 25/6/08
@Purple Dave:
Oops, I think I figured out the distinction here. The bit that was cited to me at NYTF was probably in regards to what the top sellers were in either the US specifically, or North America in general (keep in mind that until the 1999 debut of the Star Wars licensed theme, Germany still bought more total volume of LEGO sets than the entire United States, and they're still not far behind us). You said Town was top for worldwide sales, where the dominant European market holds much more sway than North America does.
@U_eriksen:
Speaking in terms of what's available in SoCal, the rides aren't all that big a deal. Not when you're a few hundred miles away from Disneyland. Even California Adventure had better rides, and they're almost entirely limited to the Boardwalk area (were limited? I've heard that park is being razed and replaced with something that tourists might actually care about). Now, that's not to say that they aren't fun, just that the few coasters that they do have are all carnival-sized, like they could all be packed up on semi-trailers and carted down the road once each week and set up for a new local event. All told, Carsbad was a _bad_ place to set up a LEGOLAND park. It's not close enough to Disney to be an easy sidetrip, and it's close enough that Disney is always a viable alternative. Plus that SoCal sun just tears the bricks up.
It's not surprising that Florida isn't being put up as an option for a second North-American LEGOLAND, while Ohio and Kansas are (heck, one of my fellow club-members suggested Toronto would be a good option, even though it would mean having to cross the border).
BTW, you need to get him a copy of LEGO Indiana Jones so he'll have new stuff to acomplish. While it does have issues, it seems to be much more multi-core-friendly than even LSW2 was.
Purple Dave
cwespey3
Posted 8:50 PM 25/6/08
Okay, now that is a trip down memory lane. I got into them back with the Castle series, and stuck with them on and off all the way up until now. It's just amazing that someone actually has every set.
I just wish they'd remake the Pirates and Space Police: the two funnest sets ever!
cwespey3
court99
Posted 12:21 PM 25/6/08
I had and still have my Galaxy explorer legos including the space monorail, ( I am that old). They are nowhere near mint condition. They have been used, abused, played with and loved. I don't have the boxes but I do still have the original instructions.
court99
jdjonsson
Posted 4:17 AM 26/6/08
That was the best video ever. It made me tear up.
jdjonsson
MarlboroTestMonkey7
Posted 1:03 AM 1/7/08
My first set: LEGO 12
My last set: Space Galaxy Explorer
My next sets: The Indiana Jones sets
MarlboroTestMonkey7