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Showing content with the highest reputation on 05/10/2015 in all areas

  1. 4 points
  2. For the next two weeks, my son and I are going to build 4 Star Wars models together. Trying out a camera with 2k and 4k images. Any input is appreciated. Here are the first two we did on this rainy Saturday, will build 75052 and video him playing next week.
    3 points
  3. I haven't been on here much due to a busy weekend, but I'll catch up on reading some of your posts. ​I'll own up to it here if my source is wrong. But, I mean, I don't even post here, so you won't see much of me around anyways. I'm not an investor, after all. I just wanted to share news with people that was posted on another format, and then someone posted it here and I heard it caused an uproar of sorts. I respect you guys, so I wanted to clear a few things up.
    3 points
  4. Here's one way to ruin ep 7... Actually, I'm sure these scenes will be in The Force Awakens : the Lucas cut
    3 points
  5. Back in the early Fall, Ed and I were approached by Krause Publishing to develop a LEGO Collecting and Price Guide book. Not sure how many of you have ever been involved with putting a book together, but it is quite a task. For months Ed worked to the early morning hours putting the content together while I have taken thousands of photos and organized data. At this point, a lot of what we needed to submit has been handed over and the full production of the book is in progress. Now you all can understand why I have been running that other thread looking for some photos for some sets. If you have a little time, please look at that list and contact me if you have the boxes or even better have it built. I will be able to send you a photo release and of course you get credit in the book. I know a few of you have had eagle eyes and found the current Amazon preorder online. The book is slated to be released mid November, just in time for all of you to ask for one for the holidays. We really hope that those of you that do decide to pick up a copy enjoy what we have put together. As I have said, it has been a lot of work and there is still a bit more to accomplish, but it will be exciting to walk into a book store one day and see your work sitting there. It may also clear up a bunch of times that Ed and I have said, we were quite busy working on some things, well at least now you know and hopefully now we can get back to doing more content for the site itself and other things. If you would like to preorder the book, just click on the photos or Amazon widget. We look forward to the time that we can get feedback on whether you like the book or not. Maybe later Ed can chime in to give more details on the content itself.
    2 points
  6. Today a big update was pushed on Brick Classifieds. One major change was the way that the site handles currency. Before it was doing a bunch of conversions to try and handle the currency conversions. It worked, but was not ideal. A lot of pages have been reworked and it is the way it should have been done from the start. Make sure your store currency is set properly and whatever you enter as a value it will hold. No more conversions unless you are need to see it in different currency and at checkout. NOTE: If you are selling on Brick Classifieds and your store currency is not USD, please take a few minutes to visit your shop and make sure all your products are set at the price you want them to be at. WANT ADS We also added a few new features to help build business conversations with potential buyers. The first is Want Ads. This is a pretty straight forward feature for buyers and sellers. All registered users can post a Want Ad. You will fill out a title, description of what you are looking for, price range, quantity, condition as well as location that the item you would like it to come from. After you fill out your post, you will see listings like this: At this point, vendors will be allowed to come to your post and create a bid for your business. Vendors will need to have this item in their store inventory. They will then select it from their inventory and put a price. If it works for you, you can accept their offer. When the offer is accepted, the vendor can then go into the shop admin area and build an invoice in the new Manual Order feature. It is pretty simple to use. Once the invoice is created, the vendor can search for the interested user and they will be emailed the invoice. If the buyer clicks the button to confirm the order, they will be taken directly to the shopping cart on the site, all the items in the invoice will already be waiting in the cart and they will just need to checkout with the agreed upon price and shipping. TRADES Another feature we added was the ability to do trades with other vendors (Note: All trades must be done vendor to vendor and again, the items of trade must be in your shop inventory). Like the Want Ads, vendors can ad items to their listing from their inventory. They can add a title and description about what they are interested in trading for. Once the trade is posted, other vendors can come in and offer items from their inventory and submit to the original poster. You can go back and forth negotiating until you both agree on the items being offered. You will click a link to approve each offer which will then lock in the trade. The entire transaction including any cash offerings are done however you wish outside of Brick Classifieds. Once everyone receives their items, you will be able to click a button that says that you are received what you were promised and then provide feedback on the trade. Users will now be able to get feedback on regular shop purchases, want ad and trade transactions. Give it all a try, feel free to PM with feedback. I wanted to get the features out there and of course they can be improved. We need to start somewhere though.
    2 points
  7. ​I actually heard it was being replaced with a UCS Spaceball One...
    2 points
  8. Bought that Craigslist Town Hall I mentioned a week ago. Damaged box, but still all 4 seals. Paid $447 USD. And I'm pretty damn certain I'm going to crack those seals and build the sucker. Figured it might be good to be on the buyer's side for perspective right? It hurts the wallet, but was thoroughly satisfying at the same time.
    2 points
  9. ​I can't imagine how much lint is on your clothes from all the ROFL'ing.
    2 points
  10. ​A $600 random LEGO set... what??? A $600 LEGO DS? Kind of understandable for a flagship. I mean, the current one is $400 and selling like hotcakes. If the company ups the size and piece count I can imagine this scenario. Lots of companies have outrageously expensive status symbol high end products. For LEGO it is the DS since 2008. Taking it one step further would not be actually such a bad idea if it turns out to be awesome. They can feature it in every kind of commercials and product placement and there are the new movies driving the craze. Even if people don'T buy it they will be talking about it. And then buy it. However personally I am still on the side of a $300 castrated DS as the more likely scenario.
    2 points
  11. First let me preempt this brief (ha) review by stating over the past couple of weeks, I have played the heck out of the Minecraft video game on my PC. I mined like a madman, punched trees as if my life depended on it (well it did), and took on hordes of zombies (sometimes adorning armor) aside annoyingly accurate skeletons and randomly appearing creepers with a few spiders on the side. I made things from houses to automatic farms to portal temples for the Nether and just about everything in-between. In short, I know a lot about Minecraft now. Moving onwards to building 21113 The Cave, it was small speedy build of a scene I think would not make sense had I not played the game prior to putting this together. This little diorama reminded me well one of those first days in mining through a corner of some hillside desperately searching for coal (not realizing at the time I could also get charcoal from trees burnt in a furnace but then again that item would require some cobblestone which needed me to mine in the first place). Anywho, I liked how the scene is laid out with a bit of the outside curving in to a little nook that features a back wall composed of 'mineable' blocks just like in the game. Getting the classic treasure chest part in a new color from the standard brown was nice for a change of pace. Funny how by game rules it would be considered a large chest which can hold a lot but in reality the thing can barely contain the included loaf of bread. Ha. The area does seem a bit cramped mainly because of the lava fall in my opinion which kind of leads me to my only possible gripe. While I find the additional aspect with Steve making obsidian (having a water source block touch a lava source block) fun, here he is carrying an iron pickaxe when only a diamond one can actually mine the mineral and even so it takes a while to break still. It's a minor quibble of details but who cares. I already have his diamond pickaxe exclusive to the Crafting Box set and getting a tool in a different color is always great. Well anyway, it is a fun scene filled with plenty of ores to 'mine' (2 coal, 1 iron, 2 gold, & 1 redstone if I remember correctly) and the Zombie with Spider help to sell it. Speaking of the Spider, the critter is cool with a place to 'seat' a Skeleton behind the head to recreate the rare Skeleton Jockey. (I have not encountered one of those in the game yet but did fight a Baby Zombie riding a chicken and a Baby Zombie Pigman also atop a chicken.) On a side note if you don’t mind getting yet another Steve or ending up with a bunch of iron pickaxes, this set feels like a good one to purchase a few of for the ores, enemies, and basic blocks. At $20 it does offer a decent amount to start with in making a larger cave to mine through.
    2 points
  12. Anybody willing to visit my business in NJ can get a tour of my LEGO office and a signature...
    2 points
  13. For only $19.99, the "Secrets of LEGO Investing" will be unlocked for the lucky buyers of this piece of literary genius!
    2 points
  14. Yeah, this set and 7965 have been a blast to source and sell - like finding money on the street without needing to give it back.
    2 points
  15. One of the most exciting times for a LEGO investor results from visiting LEGO S@H (LEGO's online storefront), looking for a particular set and suddenly realize there is a tag with the following message: "Retired Product"; Expectation and hope suddenly becomes joy. If you are reading this article, odds are you are already familiar with the concept of EOL (End Of Line), but just in case I think it would be appropriate to summarize what it means. LEGO produces different sets along the year, and each design has a planned life cycle that only the company Execs. are aware of. Once this cycle is completed, the set goes out of production to make room for a new design, usually meaning that to acquire the already retired set a prospective buyer will need to go to the secondary market (Us!). As with anything, this decrease in supply will, hopefully, translate into an increase in set value and help the investor get a decent return of his/her investment. What is the problem, then? If we know that sets retire after a couple years of being in production why do we even worry about exactly when this will happen?; Well, that's the million dollar question, LEGO is now known for being very secretive AND not really consistent when it comes time to retire a particular set. This means that while an specific modular might retire 2 years after introduced, the next may last 3 or 4 years before it is pulled out of the shelves. Having no concrete knowledge of when a set is retiring transforms into a dilemma for almost every single investor. With limited funds and an objective of maximizing profits and turnover, purchasing sets that are as close to retirement as possible becomes the most efficient way to be successful. Of course, this means that, occasionally , some investors will completely miss out on a popular set that retired before they expected OR will be left holding onto sets that will not retire for 2 or 3 more years! Tying their money, and space, for such a long period of time is definitely not the best way to make their business as efficient as possible. But, how can we as investors have any clue about when a particular set is to be retired? Well, there is really no clear cut answer. Even though there are some clues and events that may indicate a set is nearing retirement, there is usually an understandable controversy surrounding every single one of the "leading indicators". My point is that, while I tried to collect and summarize some of the possible signs suggesting retirement, none of these should really be taking as the one and only guide when developing an investing strategy. My objective is only to list them and give mostly new investors an idea of some of the things we talk about more deeply in the forums. LEADING INDICATORS: 1- Retiring Soon Tag Clearly, one of the most telling events in a set's life is when LEGO S@H assigns the tag "Retiring Soon". Even though it may seem that this event pretty much guarantees a sooner than later retirement, the process is definitely not as straightforward. One of the things that may happen is a set with the tag lingering on the shelves and online storefront for months after the tag has been assigned. This could be a way for LEGO to "Clearance" a set without actually lowering the price, basically pushing potential buyers to make a purchase before the set goes away forever. Another thing to consider is that most of the products that retire never even get the tag assigned to them at all. Think of the Haunted House model that according to the majority of the investors is as close to official retirement as it is going to get. The set never had the Retiring Soon tag, it basically went from being In Stock, to Backorder and finally to Sold Out. This is a more common transition, especially with the larger exclusives. 2- Sudden, and deep, discount in official LEGO outlets As above, this is another sign that most of the sets do not ever show. However, opposite to the Retiring Soon tag, once a set experiences a deep discount from LEGO stores and S@H (think 30% or more), it is almost a certainty that it will be retired within the next couple of weeks. As you can imagine, once a set is discounted in this manner it goes to Sold Out status in a matter of days if not hours. [img url="http://community.brickpicker.com/uploads/2014/10/Untitled1.png" cks="responsive"] The image above shows sets with both the Retiring Soon tag and the "Sale Price" discount. 3- LEGO Limits This is one of the most controversial items on the list, and for good reason. As most of the members in the forums know, LEGO is known by limiting the amount of a same set you can purchase, especially the hard to find exclusives. Most of the time, the limits start at 5 per household and seem to be lowered as a set is nearing retirement, usually to 2 or 1. Having said that, there really is no clear evidence indicating that this pattern actually correlates to going EOL, and several sets a year completely deviate from this perceived pattern. 4- Time on the Shelves Again, a very difficult sign to interpret. It seems that in years past LEGO was a little more predictable when it came to figuring out how long a particular set would be available for. Estimates and comments seem to place the average availability of a set at around 2 years, but as most of you know LEGO seems to have been extending the life of popular sets for 4 or more years!. However, with some exceptions *cough, DS*, once a set has been available for 3 or more years and is sharing shelf space with newer and similar models (think Modulars), it is pretty safe to assume that retirement will come sooner rather than later, making it OK to start stocking up. 5- Production Run Codes For an introduction to Production codes, please go HERE This somewhat recent discovery can also be considered helpful to help determine potential EOL. If we as investors see a set available in 2015 that has been showing some of the other signs of retirement, and discover that the production codes indicate current inventory came from several months ago, it could lead us to believe that LEGO has stopped production of the set and is simply waiting for the last batch to be completely sold out. As with any of the other indicators, tread carefully when using production codes. 6- Retired Product Tag Finally, the Holy Grail of LEGO investing. Once a set is assigned this tag on LEGO S@H, its death is official. This is the tag that generates more joy and excitement among the community members and, other than being able to find the set at other retailers (notably TRU & B&N), it means that any opportunity to acquire this set is pretty much gone. Finally! In the end, the point is that there is no sure way to determine if a set is nearing its retirement. The best we can all do is take a look at all of these signs in aggregate and share our opinions in the forums hoping for that beautiful day when the Retired Product tag shows up in LEGO S@H. Thanks for reading.
    1 point
  16. ​I'd "brake for nobody" on that.
    1 point
  17. ​It's alright, you're cool. Only thing going AWOL around here is some people taking a rumor a little too far as though it were gospel instead of gossip.
    1 point
  18. Some toy stores have 6 for the price of 5 at €2.99 each, so works out at average price of €2.50. Think Banba Toymaster was one
    1 point
  19. Minifig boxes don't seem to have the best ROI from what I can see ($4 * 60 = $240 and I see tons of boxes selling for ~250-350 range), unless you're willing to part it out and sell individually (pain in the buttocks). Take my opinion with a grain of salt, it's only my observation and I'm new to investing. It all depends what you can get it for, and $4 doesn't look like the prime price.
    1 point
  20. ​Good price. You can't go wrong with classic space sets.
    1 point
  21. Classic Space time from eBay! 483 Alpha-1 Rocket Base 442 Space Shuttle 6872 Xenon X-Craft Quality was good to so-so of the pieces. Some inevitable fading, some missing parts. But got a good deal and these are THE iconic old sets (442 was the first Lego "classic" Space set I believe). And the 6872 Xenon X-Craft, well, it's a swooshy little thing AND makes me think of Xenon 2:Megablast on the Amiga
    1 point
  22. Well budget cuts ... actually foggy and and in a hurry I saw you increased it from 500 to correct 600 lol... budget appropriations
    1 point
  23. ​What every happened to the valley of death and the 600?
    1 point
  24. ​The 10188 is one of the most popular and iconic LEGO sets of all time. When it retires, it will be a wanted set and will appreciate very, very well...regardless of the next version. Collectors will want the 10143 and 10188 to go along with the new model, which will be different enough to be a set onto its own. Did the iconic 7191 lose value when the 10240 came out? No, because it was an iconic set. The 10144 Sandcrawler lost value because the new set was a UCS and a better version. It will be hard to top a 4000 piece, $400 set in my opinion.
    1 point
  25. ​Looking into it. Also, before it is brought up, I am working on a few design updates to the site to make sure that these listings are more visible in more places including the home page.
    1 point
  26. Yeah to all of you who took this "because LEGO cares for us investors" too serious... sorry that you got it wrong ;-P But what I write doesn't differ from what you say: LEGO wants max. profit. YES! Max. profit is gained when cusomers are satisfied and diversity is there. LEGO Star Wars doesn't necessarily need what you call a flagship. A new big playset would be more profitable than a new version of an old set that is thrown on the market just a couple of months after the old one is gone. So in my opinion maxing the profit and NOT bringing out a new DS just 5 minutes after the old one retires are going hand in hand.
    1 point
  27. If the LEGO guy just2good has been talking to was from the marketing department, stating a "bigger and better" new DS was coming would be totally natural for a marketing guy even if the final products was in fact smaller and inferior... So I would not totally exclude the possibility of a smaller DS.
    1 point
  28. The Philly Brick Fest this year had some amazing displays as can be expected between train layouts, vast cityscapes, ....and a White Castle. Head on over to The Brick Fan to see the rest of the fun and interesting designs laid about.
    1 point
  29. Some Most resellers have bad habits. They..............
    1 point
  30. Half-way through the build of this set today. With the wife out of town, I broke down in a moment of weakness and decided to open my sole 75095 and one of my 10240 X-Wings. Both are wonderful builds, and look far better in person than the pictures. Both sets are larger than you'd think, and the TIE build has some great features. I think they've done a wonderful job with the central sphere and interior. If you're on the fence about either of these sets, I'd recommend them both. 10240 is so much more impressive in person; the box photos and box size really don't prepare you for how large these sets are once built.
    1 point
  31. Sure. It tells you what the next Falcon will look like on pages 65-79.
    1 point
  32. ​http://community.brickpicker.com/topic/10168-retired-product-update-thread/?page=8
    1 point
  33. TRU Online: (2) Imperial Star Destroyers $96 ea. (BOGO + $15 appeasement offer for screwing my online order up + Raise GC of 10.2% off) + 8% Reward pts back for using CC on balance. Pretty happy with that. Shipped to DE (family) to save on sales tax as well since I live close to border in PA. Plus I got to keep the 2 Homing Spider Droids they shipped me on the screw up which I will take into account when selling them onto another set. Really wanted my 2 Duel on Geonosis sets though.
    1 point
  34. My son and I constructed the Age of Ultron Detective Agency.
    1 point
  35. Ok nice, we have our first trade posted. I will be creating widgets to showcase these listings on Brickpicker for more exposure. Here you can see what another vendor will see. Now they can pick items from their inventory to offer as a trade. The posted will be notified that someone has submitted a trade offer. This poster did a great job by picking at least one item to trade for now. They will be able to change that later. They mentioned what they would be willing to offer and will need to select the right set later in order to make the deal be approved by both parties. Remember that both parties inventories will subtract the sets and quantities that are offered once the deal goes through.
    1 point
  36. ​ ​I got this image the next guy says "Great, I'm outside your window, Ed <waves>"
    1 point
  37. cladner earlier post was a casualty of merging threads. I quoted it on my response instead ​Agreed with the effect of monster CMF. VC has always been poor man's HH. At MSRP the difference was only $80. However, when HH climbs up, the much cheaper VC is an alternative for anyone who does not want to spend $400+ on HH. At least my hope is customers see $175 VC as a deal when the king of the hill is selling for $400 each
    1 point
  38. Keeps getting better. I do really miss the trade feature here on brickpicker though.
    1 point
  39. Most resellers help the brand and TLG. Through their actions they flush excess inventory fastcreate a healthy aftermarkt of used and new product which offers true credibility and value to the producthelp collectorsenable the return from the "Dark Age"offer insightful information about the quality and value of each product soldcreate a vast and liquid market in all corners of the worldpromote the brand strongly through their shopsSome resellers have bad habits. They Squeeze customers out of the market and force prices upClean out product before 'normal' customers have time to reactBuy huge quantities, therefore distort a normal life cycle of a productSee lego as a money-makers, therefore lacking respect for the product's mission statementUndermine the pricing policy of TLG on Exclusives, poduct lines: over / underpricing to the frustration of TLG and its customersOverinvest, creating excess Supply in the future and excerbate the risk of a bubble and boom-bust for TLGSo all in all, if resellers follow a good code of conduct, there shouldn't be a problem. Banning the "bad elements" is only normal. And with time, TLG will control better this indirect supply chain too, therefore flushing out that "tricky" behavious. For me, the net balance of resellers in very positive for TLG. It's only a minority that bothers them I think. regards
    1 point
  40. Although the golden age of lego investment is over, its quite refreshing to watch developments like this....it makes me smile and it proves that investing in Lego can be fun & unpredictable! I have some of this, but I wished I could have more. I remember less than a year ago I was in John Lewis and I was dithering whether I should buy these 2-3 boxes on the shelf. They were super battered and worn out, but I am sure that even they would sell now in the region of £350!!! Oh well...I can't be so greedy after all, I have some and that's good enough
    1 point
  41. 3x 10225 R2D2 at Legoland Billund
    1 point
  42. Found three CMF unicorn girls in two different Walgreens. Hoping these will rise to chicken suit levels down the line. Hot dog guys are still pretty elusive around here. They're just too easy to identify so they're always scooped up quick.
    1 point
  43. More pictures here: https://www.flickr.com/photos/titanscreations/sets/72157652011179380
    1 point
  44. CyberCity Hover Truck by ⣫⣤⣇⣤
    1 point
  45. 2 X Birds 21301 at K-Mart for $80 ($69.75 out of pocket) with $11 in points back This might be a good one if anyone plays the Shop Your Way game and has points. These are on the web for $44.99 (I hadn't noticed these at K-Mart before). If you look for SYW coupons, there is a $10 back in points on a $50 purchase. Also, I went to the direct mobile coupon generator here http://shc.cpn2c.co/RecomService/web/bE3R. There was a $10 off $75 toys. I was able to apply both coupons to this order (you can't always do this). I paid the balance with a 7% off raise GC. I paid with some points to get my out of pocket further, but I had to pay $75 out of pocket (via GC) to get the discounts and points back. After some points I had, it was $69.75 (7% raise card) for 2 sets out of pocket. $10 back in points, gets these sets pretty darn cheap. Once these ship, you have points to do this over and over once you generate some fresh coupon codes. About $30/set if you count the points back like cash. It's some work, but I was kinda stoked to see this set at K-Mart online.
    1 point
  46. Other than being animated cartoons, Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles and Scooby-Doo have nothing in common. At least with Scooby, LEGO completely went full-on retro to capture the classic appeal very well whereas TMNT was based on the Nickelodeon followed by the Michael Bay film versions instead of the original. As for TMNT bombing, is the theme even retired yet?
    1 point
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