I wonder how many weeks it takes to complete one project. From the stataement that you had to spend twenty frustrating minutes to just dismantle and re-adjust some mistake. And dismantling would mean that you already know those parts. I wonder how long to figure them out in th first place.
And are these ughhh...builds, I don't wanna say toys, remote controlled? Like with some app or an actual controller?
Some are remote controlled, see this one I finished earlier this year: https://peakd.com/hive-142010/@galenkp/hand-of-creation
This McLaren F1 is not RC though.
This F1 car will take me about twenty hours although some have taken much longer as it all depends on how many pieces are involved.
My oh my... that one is really big😁😁 And it is RC? Wow! These LEGO builds are so not like the ones I grew up knowing.
You sure must have some LEGO room for all your collections, especially the ones that are not RC.
Twenty hours is a lot. You must really enjoy the thrill of it all.
I'd like to commend the photography too. I love lighting you have too. It makes the photos pop.
When I was a kid my parents couldn't afford Lego sets so we'd scour the local papers for second had mixed Lego which my brothers and I used to make the most of. As an adult I stopped building Lego but went back to it some time ago and have enjoyed every moment. I'm now able to afford brand new Lego sets so I buy them. It's just one of the things that makes feel happy and I I believe I deserve that feeling.
Thanks for the compliment on the photography. I try my best.
I guess there's this burning passion in kids that just cannot be quenched. Somethings they love may just never leave them. Now, you can afford them all you want and can get all the Lego you love, and make yourself happy all you can.
People mention kids in respect of Lego, but I think fun isn't the sole domain of kids at all, and one should never lose one's sense of fun, no matter where it comes from. Once one loses their sense of fun, well I guess it's time to die.