Wednesday, July 15, 2009

The Emerald Night (REVIEW)


I just received Lego set #10194 The Emerald Night this afternoon. After a much anticipated day of waiting.

The new Emerald Night comes with some new bricks and features that are well worth the cost in my opinion. This set is the first steam set Lego has developed in a good long time, and was given a great deal of detail to add to it's Shock Value.

There is no doubt about it that the new Drive wheels and Blind Drivers are an exciting new feature for lego train lovers. Following in the footsteps of Big Ben Bricks and their wheels, which I admit I have bought. They match in size, allowing them to be compatible with one another, a great plus to those of us who constantly have the need to build something else with our bricks.

Along with the addition of the new wheels we see the new slope bricks, not just in grey, but in the rich green. These create most of the detail within the boiler and really bring out the powerful distinctions that make steam engines so elegant and unique.

Now, about color; The Emerald Night comes with 4 new color additions to the Lego line, dark Brown, Dark Green, gold, and silver. We have seen gold and silver before but in more, metallic colors, as a color coat on bricks.

Assembling the Emerald Night is fairly quick and easy if you're a regular at building with Legos. She runs exceptionally well and the drive rods don't seem to interfere with the clean, smooth movement of the wheels. The only exception is around turns there is a dramatic slow-down, and sometimes, depending on the condition of your rails she can get stuck. Now, the slow-down is to be expected around turns, just not as much as she sometimes will.

Overall I would give the Emerald Night a 9 star rating, and recommend adding this set to your collection, if you haven't already. Now if they would just make individual carriage sets for other cars to add onto the train.

Wednesday, July 1, 2009

Introduction

I think I can pretty much speak for everyone when I say that we all have a favorite past-time in our lives. Whether you've been collecting baseball cards since you were ten, or snow globes since you were 11. It's something different for everyone.

For me, my collecting started when I was four or five, and it happened to be Legos. Yes, those little plastic pieces that lie around and are oh so painful to step on. Since then it has become more of a hobby, collecting old sets, rebuilding the sets I had back in the 1990's and so on.

At the top of my fondness for Legos, trains. I center my Lego collection around trains no matter what.

Now, not everyone might think this is a normal hobby for an 18 year-old young-man, but then, what is normal?