NotUrsula
DIS Legend
- Joined
- Apr 19, 2002
- Messages
- 20,077
WHAT is "simple" about a 695 piece house? That is what I would like someone in this thread to tell me. Those of you who say that they are only making simple sets, PLEASE I want to know! Tell me what is "simple" about 695 pieces???![]()
Well, it isn't exactly "simple", but in the modern Lego world, that many pieces normally does not denote a high degree of difficulty. It isn't how many pieces a particular set has that indicates that, it is how many pieces the largest set in a line has. When there are several lines that have kits containing well over 2000 pieces, a line that tops out at 695 doesn't qualify as allowing for a truly complex build experience.
In modern LEGO set terms, 695 pieces is very middle of the road; not really easy but not really difficult, either. My DS14 is a serious LEGO kid; he could easily do a set with 695 pieces in under 15 minutes. IME, a set of that size would probably take a spacially-inclined beginner around 90 minutes to do if he or she was concentrating on it.
Here is something else about LEGO sets to consider, and it is something that I think is going to prove problematic with the structures in the Friends line: IME, LEGO objects that are meant for active play but that do not hold together well will fail to succeed; kids will tell other kids that they are junk. The one of these that I most remember is the Undersea line from about 8 years ago; the builds were designed to be hollow to use fewer pieces and be lower-priced, but they fell apart any time you tried to play with them, even though they had moving parts. The marketing was dropped very quickly because sales fell like a rock once kids had a chance to try them; every time you put any force on them they collapsed. Since the Friends structures are almost all facades, I'm betting that some of them will have the same problem.