Lego is ripping off the Galciv2 ship builder...

WWW Link

I could have sworn I built this in Galciv 2 at one point...
49,704 views 37 replies
Reply #1 Top
What makes me laugh is the little Star Wars chess board that you can see in some of the pictures around the bridge area. Where's the holographic monster pieces?!?
Reply #2 Top
i want one! man, i miss legos.
Reply #3 Top
My son is still on Duplo... man cant wait till hes old enough for legos...
Reply #4 Top
Don't let society say you're "too old" for Legos! They are just trying to murder your inner child.
Reply #5 Top
i don't feel too old, but too nostalgic. the new lego sets kinda suck. i miss the old school castles!
Reply #6 Top
i miss the old school castles!


Ah the memories.
Reply #7 Top
My favourite toy when i was young was my trusty airifle! It would still give me just as much fun today but sadly it no longer legal in Australia.

I would have very much enjoyed targeting your leggo castle with it!! lol
Reply #8 Top
I'd build a lego army just to raid your castle!

I'd watch all the little people with swords in their badly shaped hands, go right up to your gate and knock it down, then they'd kill your lego king man!
Reply #9 Top
I would have very much enjoyed targeting your leggo castle with it!! lol


you got nothin on my wizard with bottle rockets  ever stopped to imagine what it looks like when you light an M80 in the castle's dungeon? i don't have to imagine.
Reply #10 Top
I'd build a lego army just to raid your castle!

I'd watch all the little people with swords in their badly shaped hands, go right up to your gate and knock it down, then they'd kill your lego king man!


For some reason that reminds me of Lord of the Rings!

Oh by the way, in Australia the word 'ring' is also a slang term for anus!! So for example, if somone farts you could say "ooow that sounded like a ring burner". Anyway my point is that the first time i herd the name of that movie 'Lord of the Rings' i was quite shocked and the images it brought to mind are not suitable for this forum!! hehehe yea well it was just totally hillarious to hear that name for a movie.

ps fellowship of the ring is quie funny as well along that same line of thought!
Reply #11 Top
you got nothin on my wizard with bottle rockets ever stopped to imagine what it looks like when you light an M80 in the castle's dungeon? i don't have to imagine.


lol, well truth be known, i can imagine it would be hell fun to each set up a castle with soldiers on the walls and all that and then take turns shooting each others castles with the airifle
Reply #12 Top

My favourite toy when i was young was my trusty airifle! It would still give me just as much fun today but sadly it no longer legal in Australia.

I would have very much enjoyed targeting your leggo castle with it!! lol



When I was a kid we used to make functioning Lego Guns. Built a reinforced gun frame with a slot near the front to hold one end of those industrial strength rubber bands, looped the other end around a 2x4 block that was half attached to the top rear of the gun. The longer your "barrel", the more powerful they were, but you had to seriously reinforce your structure to keep the gun from exploding in your hands, the longer it got. Flicked the lego piece off with your thumb to fire it, and they effing hurt when you got hit. We generally aimed for the eyes.


This was well before video games, unless you count "Pong". Honestly, I dont know what parents are complaining about with video games now a days. When I was a kid, or pastimes always included *real* weapons, *real* fire, and direct physical violence so intense it would involve lawsuits today. You parents should be happy for video games.

Reply #13 Top
This was well before video games, unless you count "Pong". Honestly, I dont know what parents are complaining about with video games now a days. When I was a kid, or pastimes always included *real* weapons, *real* fire, and direct physical violence so intense it would involve lawsuits today. You parents should be happy for video games.


hahahaha

I grew up in Mildura, a grape growing district. I discovered that wax paper coiled up to make a long tube about the size of a grape made an awesome weapon! I would blow grapes through the tube which had a range of about 4 or 5 suburban houses. They hurt like hell on impact but left no evidence on the skin.
Reply #14 Top
Never too old for lego, hey i am 30 and i have all the collectors edition star wars models...minus the Death star.

They have pride of place in my cabinet. I tell ya though, the Star Destroyer was certainly a mission to build....finished product is cool though, 3 feet long and 2 feet wide...it is a sight to see.

As for real life VS video games, our past time was throwing rocks at fast moving freight trains and lighting fires, not the best pastime to do in Australia. I couldn't agree more that video games VS my mis-spent childhood would win out. If video games can keep my 5yr old from throwing rocks and lighting bush fires then something is right with the world after all.
Reply #15 Top
A) I can't tell, but is Lego Selling that thing? Cause I want one
B) I wish I had time for legos. They are soo sweet! I had a bunch of the old school space ones. Like when they were just called "Space" (I think that was it - the old white ones)

Reply #16 Top
If they do sell one, i will buy it for sure!
Reply #17 Top
Throwing Apricots,peaches and cherries at each other. Mom loved laundry days.
Reply #18 Top
i miss the old school castles!

Yeah, the castles were great. Last year I came across a website (www.classic-castle.com) with pictures and info on all the old sets. At the time I just put the things together and played with it, knowing nothing about the background. With websites like these you can find out when particular sets were designed and why and when new pieces were introduced and so on. For instance when the first lego castle was introduced, when the theme didn't even exist (of course I couldn't care less about this at the time).

Now looking back, it's sometimes funny when you realize where your inspiration for lego designs came from. The other day I bought an Alien collectors dvd box and when watching the first movie again I was amazed at how the spaceship/structures in the movie looked perfect to me, exactly how I used to (try to) draw them or build them in lego's. Then I realized that my idea of a perfect starship was created by movies like Starwars and Aliens in the first place..
Reply #19 Top
Responding to the point of the topic, not being happy about Legos- which I am...

LEGO isn't doing the 'ripping off'. Rather, it's just one of their builders.
Reply #20 Top
Last year I came across a website (www.classic-castle.com)


that website is awesome! man i always used to dream about being able to build stuff that elaborate (the classic castle cities).
Reply #21 Top

Responding to the point of the topic, not being happy about Legos- which I am...

LEGO isn't doing the 'ripping off'. Rather, it's just one of their builders.


Yeah...I think I got that. It was just a tongue in cheek topic for an excuse to link to that ship. It does look like something out of the ship builder though...most people are quick to make the comparison between the ship builder and legos.

Reply #22 Top
As for real life VS video games, our past time was throwing rocks at fast moving freight trains and lighting fires, not the best pastime to do in Australia. I couldn't agree more that video games VS my mis-spent childhood would win out. If video games can keep my 5yr old from throwing rocks and lighting bush fires then something is right with the world after all


Well i dunno what kids can do outdoors in Australia these days? I mean just about everything i used to enjoy doing as a kid is illegal nowdays. No i don't mean malicious things, just things that are a bit dangerous. Since today's Australia is getting so obsessed with safety and preserving lives that life is becomming hardly worth living! It is a big fat catch 22 - by banning everything for safeties sake, you destroy that very thing you were trying to save - life!

Whenever i see that running of the bulls event in spain, the news reports are usually sarcastic towards it as if they are stupid. Well of course their stupid, but the whole point is that they are FREE to choose to be stupid, and that is the big lesson Australia has failed miserably to get through it's big fat dumb head.

PS i actually admire spain and its running of the bulls event, because i am just sooo fed up with all this safety bulshit in Australia i just want to scream!!
Reply #23 Top
When I was a kid we used to make functioning Lego Guns. Built a reinforced gun frame with a slot near the front to hold one end of those industrial strength rubber bands, looped the other end around a 2x4 block that was half attached to the top rear of the gun. The longer your "barrel", the more powerful they were, but you had to seriously reinforce your structure to keep the gun from exploding in your hands, the longer it got. Flicked the lego piece off with your thumb to fire it, and they effing hurt when you got hit. We generally aimed for the eyes.


lol, well truth be known, i can imagine it would be hell fun to each set up a castle with soldiers on the walls and all that and then take turns shooting each others castles with the airifle



I'd build a lego army just to raid your castle!

I'd watch all the little people with swords in their badly shaped hands, go right up to your gate and knock it down, then they'd kill your lego king man!


Look up the old game called "Crossbows and Catapults"...

We wasted HOURS upon DAYS upon WEEKS playing this game
Reply #24 Top
Look up the old game called "Crossbows and Catapults"...

We wasted HOURS upon DAYS upon WEEKS playing this game


lawn darts, anyone?

Well of course their stupid, but the whole point is that they are FREE to choose to be stupid, and that is the big lesson Australia has failed miserably to get through it's big fat dumb head.


this is by no means only happening in Australia. i call it 'cultural hypochondria.' here in the states at least, it's not just about safety in the sense you seem to mean. sure, children's playgrounds are now these low-to-the-ground, all-plastic jokes that look more like doll houses than anything you'd play on. it's not just kids, either. disposable coffee lids are invariably emblazened with "WARNING: CONTENTS HOT". but it's also a cultural neurosis about being sanitary. everything gets santized 20 times per use in 13 different ways. cops wear latex gloves now. and it's no longer good enough for a kitchen to look clean: now the jobs not done until you've committed mass germocide.

i don't think at its heart it's about safety as an end in itself. not in the U.S. at least. i think it's an outgrowth of living in what one of my sociology professors called a "litigious society." no one wants to get sued, and it's not even about winning or losing a lawsuit so much as maintaining a public image.

and since businesses and public institutions invest so much into safety as a means of avoiding unpleasent lawsuits, the companies that grew up around these needs have branched into "providing service to" (i.e., advertising to the point of creating a 'need' that wasn't there before) - to consumers, as well as institutions.
Reply #25 Top
speaking of good links, a coworker just pointed me towards "The Brick Testament"  

http://www.thebricktestament.com/index.html