I actually thought that both the animation and content of second place was the best. Even the cutaway as vehicles moved out of the border of the panel was brilliant.
@Kaiser-Machead: Lindsay, don't do it. Robert cuts holes in the bottom of the popcorn bag. I found that out when I put Hot Butter Substitute on and he screamed.
1985 is mostly broken :( Where is futron and blacktron? First space with working visors. Mini figs existed before 1978 with no faces and no arms and rigid legs. Good effort Giz, but there are some figures missing.
Dunno how accurate this list is, but in the 2000 section, the Han Solo you provided is flesh tone... and the fleshies didn't start appearing until 2003/2004 If I remember correctly. The flesh-tone Han is probably from 2007.
@cloudcavalier: That Han Solo is not from the 2007 UCS Falcon (he has a vest), but from Jabba's Sail Barge (2006). The same minifig came with proper yellow skin in the Desert Skiff set, which was actually released in 2000. So, right year, wrong skin color. There was another Han Solo minifig released that year, though, which was the ANH version with primary blue pants and yellow skin that came in the very first Millennium Falcon set.
Hey, wanna hear something scary? Currently, Bricklink recognizes 4002 unique minifigs. Now, granted, you've got 149 of those that are from Belville (which have more in common with Barbie than Cool Blacktron, aka Blacktron I), another 33 of those that are the TECHNIC maxi-figs, 571 DUPLO people, etc., but even when you pare everything down to just straight-up stock minifigs, you're probably still looking at over 3000. There are 1200 Town minifigs alone, followed distantly by the 401 Castle minifigs, 250 Sports minifigs, and 239 Star Wars minifigs (though, to be fair, a chunk of those are just droids that are built from regular parts). And then there are the 51 non-articulated minifigs (or "miniquins"), which first appeared in 1975 (three years before this timeline even starts), and have appeared as recently as 1983 (the all-black statue, which is at the top of the list).
Also, it should be noted that AFOLs recognize a _lot_ more variety than The LEGO Company ever would. They'd consider an older yellow-head Han Solo to be the same minifig as a fleshie Han Solo, but on Bricklink they'll get cataloged as two different minifigs (and no fleshies existed before 2003, unless you count the faceless TIE Fighter Pilots who have all had brown or reddish-brown heads). So will notable variants, like what's going to happen with Harley Quinn from the Batman theme (one-boob vs. two-boob, because they mixed up the order of black and white paint aps).
@Ellomdian: So far, the truly gun-like guns are as follows:
crossbow (thrown in for completeness' sake) flintlock pistol flintlock rifle revolver pistol "old west" rifle (no way to tell what style it's supposed to be) tommygun (Batman only) short-barrel semi-auto (Batman only) long-barrel semi-auto (Indiana Jones only...so far) short SW rifle (think Stormtrooper) long SW rifle (think Sandtrooper) SW pistol (only used by Clone Wars Clonetrooper officers)
Aside from those, there are a few things that have been used as guns, mostly in Space or early Star Wars themes:
video camera (works as a large energy rifle) torch (L-shaped handle with a large "cup" on one end) megaphone (the plague of early SW sets) "space gun" (looks sorta similar to the video camera, but it has a long handle instead of the large bricklike section that has two studs on it) nozzle (two different styles, the first of which usually came with string permanently fused into one end, and the newer version where there's a hole at the T-junction so you can just tie your own string on)
I don't know if Brick-Arms was even in business when they added the first two "modern" guns (from the Batman equipment pack), but The Little Armory certainly was. However, that doesn't mean that TLA's success was in any way influential in their decision to break with tradition and create what are essentially modern weapons of war (since the various firearms from SW 4-6 were designed around actual working guns, most of which were WWII-era surplus). I suspect it had more to do with the fact that Kjeld Kirk Kristiansen decided to step down as CEO in 2004 (the six new guns have shown up two per year from 2006-2008). They didn't _need_ to go there (Batman started the trend, and the old revolver works just as well for that theme as the semi-auto and tommygun), but I do know that the six new guns run around the same price on Bricklink as most similar guns from custom-part sellers, and the SW megaphone-guns were a _HUGE_ gripe from non-AFOLs who only started collecting because of the Star Wars theme.
Must...collect....more. I only have a paltry handful as I've just begun my reinstallation of LEGOtism, but Chubacca and R2D2 (not the improved version dammit) make them uberspecial! Now, time to collect minifig parts.
12/29/08
12/29/08
12/29/08
12/29/08
12/29/08
BTW: Robert screams like a girl.
12/29/08
12/29/08
Believe me! Belieeeeve meeeee!
12/29/08
12/29/08
Ok. I'm here! Better late then never.
I'll take my minifigs, neat. With a triple shot of Kettle One.
Jesus, Matthew, John and Robert can all sit next to me. I have 4 sides last I checked!
On to watching!
Oh and Shamoononon, I will provide you with a blindfold and/or tranquilizers.
12/29/08
10/31/08
Jesus 'Muerto Borracho' Diaz? Haha...translates to dead drunk.
Ok then! Well at least my Halloween avatar is showing up if people click.
10/31/08
11/01/08
Blacktron is out back beating Futuron to a bloody pulp.
10/31/08
10/31/08
Great list though1
11/01/08
That Han Solo is not from the 2007 UCS Falcon (he has a vest), but from Jabba's Sail Barge (2006). The same minifig came with proper yellow skin in the Desert Skiff set, which was actually released in 2000. So, right year, wrong skin color. There was another Han Solo minifig released that year, though, which was the ANH version with primary blue pants and yellow skin that came in the very first Millennium Falcon set.
10/31/08
Also, it should be noted that AFOLs recognize a _lot_ more variety than The LEGO Company ever would. They'd consider an older yellow-head Han Solo to be the same minifig as a fleshie Han Solo, but on Bricklink they'll get cataloged as two different minifigs (and no fleshies existed before 2003, unless you count the faceless TIE Fighter Pilots who have all had brown or reddish-brown heads). So will notable variants, like what's going to happen with Harley Quinn from the Batman theme (one-boob vs. two-boob, because they mixed up the order of black and white paint aps).
10/30/08
10/30/08
Guess brick-arms was actually making money.
10/31/08
So far, the truly gun-like guns are as follows:
crossbow (thrown in for completeness' sake)
flintlock pistol
flintlock rifle
revolver pistol
"old west" rifle (no way to tell what style it's supposed to be)
tommygun (Batman only)
short-barrel semi-auto (Batman only)
long-barrel semi-auto (Indiana Jones only...so far)
short SW rifle (think Stormtrooper)
long SW rifle (think Sandtrooper)
SW pistol (only used by Clone Wars Clonetrooper officers)
Aside from those, there are a few things that have been used as guns, mostly in Space or early Star Wars themes:
video camera (works as a large energy rifle)
torch (L-shaped handle with a large "cup" on one end)
megaphone (the plague of early SW sets)
"space gun" (looks sorta similar to the video camera, but it has a long handle instead of the large bricklike section that has two studs on it)
nozzle (two different styles, the first of which usually came with string permanently fused into one end, and the newer version where there's a hole at the T-junction so you can just tie your own string on)
I don't know if Brick-Arms was even in business when they added the first two "modern" guns (from the Batman equipment pack), but The Little Armory certainly was. However, that doesn't mean that TLA's success was in any way influential in their decision to break with tradition and create what are essentially modern weapons of war (since the various firearms from SW 4-6 were designed around actual working guns, most of which were WWII-era surplus). I suspect it had more to do with the fact that Kjeld Kirk Kristiansen decided to step down as CEO in 2004 (the six new guns have shown up two per year from 2006-2008). They didn't _need_ to go there (Batman started the trend, and the old revolver works just as well for that theme as the semi-auto and tommygun), but I do know that the six new guns run around the same price on Bricklink as most similar guns from custom-part sellers, and the SW megaphone-guns were a _HUGE_ gripe from non-AFOLs who only started collecting because of the Star Wars theme.
10/30/08
For instance, there was a series of mini-figs in red shirts, with an 'M' on the front. I forgot which series these belonged to.
10/31/08
Magnetron. It was, not too surprisingly, a magnet-oriented Space theme (pretty much every vehicle had a magnet built into it somewhere).
10/30/08
10/31/08
As soon as I read it the mental image snapped in perfectly!
(But then again I've always been a bit mental)
10/30/08
I present you with Alpha Draconis!
( Ok I know its creepy I know his name )
10/31/08
And it's not creepy, it's geek-hot ;)
10/30/08