![]() ![]() The interior to the building is where the set finds more detail, albeit packed into a shallow grid of rooms that is built in a very similar style to the 3-in-1 Creator range’s houses, with plenty of doorframes and pillars used to divide four-stud deep platforms. The outside to the building is predominantly tan, with eight window pieces built identical – detail comes from subtle aspects to the build, and two large stickers, before the roof steals the show thanks to a skylight with collapsing play function. For an idea of the complexity of this build, it took 90 minutes start to finish. Further to this is a more detailed lower ground extension that, without the context of the film to compare with, is really reminiscent of a museum. The entire build is for creating this structure, and the end result is a nicely decorated exterior on the front side, and a grid of shallow, open rooms on the interior filled with various details no doubt relevant to the film. ![]() That unfamiliar setting is a large skeletal fascia to represent Lockwood Estate. In terms of pure play, disregarding the context that the film could offer, it places its two dinosaurs in a new, unfamiliar context. Where every other set on offer presents island-based activity in the form of chasing down or being chased by various dinosaurs with vehicles, or within particular enclosures, 75930 is the first set in the LEGO Jurassic World universe presenting its dinosaur action in what appears to be an off-island, civilised setting. At least twice the price of anything else in the Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom range and including the spoilerific main ‘bad guy’ dinosaur, the Indoraptor, 75930 actually takes a risk in also offering a notable change of pace.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |