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Wait...thats not why they went away from the 90 degree corner on the torsos. Because they couldve just put the draft angle on the inside like they do with any other square or rectangle shaped brick. They went with that trapezoid shaped torso because its resembles a humans torso more than a square or rectangle shaped torso.
Yeah, the video did not explain the real reason. It was just by luck, that a more accurate representation of a human torso, also came with natural draft angles.
I'm new to the Lego UA-cam saying and I got to be honest it is just a standing how many dumb things I hear like that it's like the standard in this little branch of UA-cam is just far far lower than the rest but my Lord I just hear the name crap like this day in day out on the Lego UA-cam section
And what is your secret? The draft angle that is and never was a secret. Thats the normal industry of injection molding. And nobody is hiding it from us.
Draft angle is very important for molding... but in my opinion the idea that the torso design is based on the draft angle is completely speculative and has no proof. Draft angle has nothing to do with the actual shape of the minifigure. Its totally an choice of the designers. Edit: the trapezoid design offers a great range of motion for the arms. The distance between hand get closer if they rotate upwards etc. Also it could have a purpose or the arm holes and at the assembly of the arms as well. All of these reasons in addition to the aesthetic reason have more explanatory power then the idea suggested in the video.
I agree. That is also provides a natural draft angle is just a great bonus, I feel. It's simply a better design for all the other reasons and if the other reasons would have dictated that a more rectangular torso was needed, I'm sure Lego would have engineered it like they have with the rectangular bricks.
yea got a bin of lego from my grand pa with like a lot 2 big sets like a fire station and i tink a crane and like a lot of small 1s but since i wad a 9 year old badicly broke most of them up i see now they may be wort some money but yea a bin with new old and mid old lego
I'm going to call B S on that for the reason for the taper on the minifig, if they didn't taper the body, when they put the arms on it, the guys would look like Kylo Ren's shirtless scene. They would be too wide to fit in most the models they are meant for, the taper is to keep them as close to 2 stud width as possible. Enjoyed the video, I like seeing manufacturing equipment, I don't play with Lego's anymore but still like what people are building, incredible ingenuity
Misleading title, and inverted causality. There's no conspiracy here. The outer part of the minifig being used for draft is more of a convenient coincidence. If they wanted a straight 90° minifig, they could've had the draft on the inside of the minifig, like they do with most other parts. There's no strict engineering reason to have the draft exclusively there. Generally, if design and manufacturing practicality happen to align, it just means you're killing two birds with one stone. It doesn't necessarily mean that design was compromised for the sake of easy manufacturing. It's like saying a painting was made to fit the frame, when it's more likely the frame was made to fit the painting, and the fact that it's a standard-size Ikea frame is more of a happy coincidence.
I played with them armless mini figures back in the day. I thought that maybe we had worn the faces off them. No mention of the larger figures with the giant heads and very flexible arms, torso was a regular four cube piece with extra bits for attaching the arms. Large caps as well. Very interesting.
Yes, a draft angle is important, but not to prevent a vacuum when the part is ejected. The forces of the ejector pins are way bigger than the force of the pressure difference on such a small piece.
I had a lot of LEGO in the 1960's and 1970's. My brother and I still have several of those early figures that look like petrol pumps. We used to put faces on with marker pens. I'm trying to collect the really nice 1/76 scale trucks - red plastic, silver metal wheels - made by LEGO in the 1960's. I had some, but they didn't survive. Great video, though. I still like the fact that LEGO is the world's largest manufacturer of tyres.
I really don’t think the design would be because of the draft angle. If they had really wanted them to be rectangular they would have made them like all the other rectangular Lego pieces they make !!!! It’s got to be for aesthetic reasons that they slope in at the shoulders.
Im pretty sure its a cosmetic choice.. regular bricks are 90°. I dont think lego has a problem with extracting bricks from molds. The figures would look dumb if they were square. Considering that this "draft angle" technique isnt seen anywhere else, i think youre wrong.
Super cool! I love how the design also takes the 4-stud width of the minifig into consideration. So the top width of the torso plus the arms/hands all fit within 4 studs. And that’s also the reason why it’s so difficult to put 2 minifigs in the front seat of a 6 stud wide car lol!
Yeah... No.... That's probably not the reason why the torso is angled, that's probably just your opinion, man. Fact is, I lost 11 minutes of my life nobody will give me back.
This was very well-explained, and it helps the community gain more appreciation for the engineering that goes into the evolution of this wonderful toy. However, your video title makes it sounds like Lego has been intentionally hiding a 'secret' from their customers, which looks like misleading clickbait to me.
this is preposterous. Why must that one piece have an external draft angle while everything else can be square and have them internally? That is not the reason for it being that shape, you literally made that up. Coming up with a possible reason for something isnt the same thing as finding the reason for it.
Yeah, I doubt that Lego did the angle for the drafting alone. Likely it is just a bonus, the Figures (and why you dissing Nick and the technic figs? They got noses, ears too) were made in the shape of a humans torso.
This is rubbish! If they had to do this to the torso then they'd have to do it to all pieces yet obviously they don't. Are you just making up nonsense for views or do you have researched facts?
Oh, it’s just draft angle. Kind of was expecting something more exiting. Anyways you start noticing draft angles in everything. From plastic, glass, sometimes metal. Everything manufactured needs to be able to be made as easily as possible, if you look at just about anything molded to can notice places where they need to hide seams and draft.
Well, Lego clearly makes square and cubic bricks, so how does this apply to that? I would guess they could use a blast of air inside the mould to release the pieces if the push pins really create a vacuum as significant as you said. How does it translate to and from the square bricks and the torso?
cuz the dude is wrong, lol, the reason the body is trapezoidal is so they can make the arm holes with a 2 piece mold. Has nothing to do with draft angles.
You take WAY to long to explain what draft angle is and why it's a thing. You say draft angle and look at this angle a million times and then when you finally describe it, you still take way to long, saying the same thing over and over before finally spitting it out. That should have taken less then a minute to explain clearly.
wow! this gave me an insight to why lego looks the way it is!! thanks for making this video, I subscribed, and shared this vid with my friends who love lego as well!
There’s like. Maybe 2 minutes of real information in this 10min video. The plot is very lost amongst useless dribble and pointles repetition. You mention draft angles like four times before you get to explaning what they are, and the whole point is to explain what they are.
I am just thinking, where the draft is on a piece like 3065, 1x2 brick without any inside structure. This mold predates the normal 1x2 already existing in the 1950s and is only used for transparent colors today.
Looking at the early minifigs, and the preproduction prototypes you can see they wanted the feet and the center of the figure to be the same dimensions as a 2x1 plate, the stub arm policeman at 3:05 shows this clearly with a white stripe in the center. They went for a gentle houreglass shape to tie it all togethr, but later when they went for the full production figure they re did the feet and torso to look much more appealing, but still fitting the same aesthetic. Of course tehe feet still fit onto 2x1 studs but the torso doesnt quite have the same dimentions anymore, though internally it does fit.
Perhaps the best Lego video channel on UA-cam. I really like your work, it's so fascinating. Keep making this kind of content, I love Lego and its factory secret
i have a suggestion! i think it would be really cool if you released a ww2 us navy minifigure as such: sand blue torso with printed kapok life vest, dark blue legs with printed boots, and a light gray m1 steel pot helmet
I just came across your channel and even though as yet I've watched only the Draft Angle video I already think it's going to be some of the best Lego content on youtube. Side note: seeing those older sets from the late 70s is always a bittersweet experience. I had an extraordinary collection of Lego when I was younger and I was always at my most content when building. Each minifig or group of minifigures had a backstory and many were good friends. I remember vividly the disbelief, shame and sadness I felt when without warning or sentiment my Oh it's still too gut wrenching to go into.
Not a subscriber but was really interested in the video. Great sounding theme too. Unfortunately you lost me at 6 min in. The language you use makes me feel like you’re either trying cram extra segments in to run up the clock, or you just don’t remember what you’ve said/ worried about understanding so you double or triple down on saying things. Not sure what the reason is but it felt like you were stringing me along. Also felt like those 5 min ads that have “a great technique” that they never mention and just want to sell a book or class. Anyhow hope you continue to grow and good luck/ perseverance.
I assumed that's why it was shaped that way. So this just made me glad I was right. I build a lot of gunpla so it made me curious about lego injection mold
The video is incorrect. I looked up the US patent, it was filed in February 1978 and granted in December 1979. I couldn't find the exact date of release of set 600-2, but if it didn't release after the patent it released less than two months before it.
@@shockthetoast great work! It got me curious because in the camera industry there's a company which holds a fraudulent patent on raw video, Nikon is trying to fight their patent through the argument that they started selling the camera before the patent was granted which allegedly makes the patent invalid.
I am curious about how they use the draft angle on the inside of a brick to make it easier to eject bricks from the mold. It would seem like that wouldn't help, but presumably they can be creative in the mold design.
Doing a search, I see that the 1.5 degree draft angle on the inside isn't enough. There's an 0.5 degree draft angle on the outside of a LEGO brick too, and a fillet on the bottom to prevent it from being noticeable.
@@johnsavard7583 You're not "Quadibloc" are you? I LOVE your website, I flippin' LOVE it! Your designs for alternative camera filters are amazing just for the thought and imagination you put into them. I'd like to own a camera that can see in chartreuse! Honestly I've spent hours on the site over the years, loads of stuff I happen to be interested in. I've used it as an example in stuff I've been talking about to people online. How do you mean a "fillet"? Explain in a bit more detail, please. Also others have mentioned there's no practical need for the torso to be this shape, that it's for the arm holes, or that it's just aesthetic. Any opinion?
I think they use compressed air because it leaves no marks on the model. A lot of parts with right angles like bricks and plates have those marks, so having no outside draft angle is not the reason.
If you'd named this video "10 boring minutes about injection moulding" you might not have got so many views. Lego don't "hide" manufacturing details from people, people just don't care. Very poor. Oh in case anyone hasn't seen the video yet... You know how minifig bodies have a slope on each side? That slope allows air to slide in past it, when they remove the minifig from the mould that it's cast in. It it was just flat straight, they'd have had to... do something else instead. There. 10 minutes of your life back, my gift to you! I hope you enjoy them.
You are too quick at the most important part. The square bricks show that inside draft can be done. So the important part is, why didn't they do that on the torso. You very briefly mention space, but that is the main issue and reason then. To have the torso small. And I wouldn't say it's THE reason. It looks more natural, the arms look better, probably also something to do with the arm holes, which makes the mold more difficult. For the rest, interesting video. Relax a bit.
Wait...thats not why they went away from the 90 degree corner on the torsos. Because they couldve just put the draft angle on the inside like they do with any other square or rectangle shaped brick. They went with that trapezoid shaped torso because its resembles a humans torso more than a square or rectangle shaped torso.
i believe it's a mix of both reasons
Yeah, the video did not explain the real reason. It was just by luck, that a more accurate representation of a human torso, also came with natural draft angles.
And it gives the hands a better position to grip things exactly two studs apart when the arms are straight forward.
...and also allows for a lot more range of motion with the arms
Technically, that trapezoid shape is actually inaccurate to people. It should be upside down.
dude, it's not for the draft angle, it's so the arm holes don't need an insert. If it wasn't trapezoidal they couldn't do it with a 2 piece mold.
So I've truly wasted my time watching this video. It's not just boring and not what Lego are "hiding", it's not even correct!
Then why are the armless ones also like that?
I'm new to the Lego UA-cam saying and I got to be honest it is just a standing how many dumb things I hear like that it's like the standard in this little branch of UA-cam is just far far lower than the rest but my Lord I just hear the name crap like this day in day out on the Lego UA-cam section
And what is your secret? The draft angle that is and never was a secret. Thats the normal industry of injection molding. And nobody is hiding it from us.
But he really dug into it 😅
No way...I can't believe they actually used plastic! That's messed up Lego. Why'd you kept that secret from us??
I just assumed it was to allow the arms of the minifigs to be in a more natural position and have it fit better in cars/seats/etc.
Draft angle is very important for molding... but in my opinion the idea that the torso design is based on the draft angle is completely speculative and has no proof.
Draft angle has nothing to do with the actual shape of the minifigure. Its totally an choice of the designers.
Edit: the trapezoid design offers a great range of motion for the arms. The distance between hand get closer if they rotate upwards etc. Also it could have a purpose or the arm holes and at the assembly of the arms as well. All of these reasons in addition to the aesthetic reason have more explanatory power then the idea suggested in the video.
I agree. That is also provides a natural draft angle is just a great bonus, I feel. It's simply a better design for all the other reasons and if the other reasons would have dictated that a more rectangular torso was needed, I'm sure Lego would have engineered it like they have with the rectangular bricks.
Imagine an army of those old guys that would be awesome
i have 4 plus the police car
@@daanhu2477 cool
they in q big bin of lego
@@daanhu2477 that really makes you think
yea got a bin of lego from my grand pa with like a lot 2 big sets like a fire station and i tink a crane and like a lot of small 1s but since i wad a 9 year old badicly broke most of them up i see now they may be wort some money but yea a bin with new old and mid old lego
I'm going to call B S on that for the reason for the taper on the minifig, if they didn't taper the body, when they put the arms on it, the guys would look like Kylo Ren's shirtless scene. They would be too wide to fit in most the models they are meant for, the taper is to keep them as close to 2 stud width as possible. Enjoyed the video, I like seeing manufacturing equipment, I don't play with Lego's anymore but still like what people are building, incredible ingenuity
The shape of the torso also allows the arms to rotate while preventing the hands from making contact with the hips and legs.
No arms, we call them shruggers.
Because they look like their shrugging their shoulders.
Misleading title, and inverted causality. There's no conspiracy here.
The outer part of the minifig being used for draft is more of a convenient coincidence. If they wanted a straight 90° minifig, they could've had the draft on the inside of the minifig, like they do with most other parts. There's no strict engineering reason to have the draft exclusively there.
Generally, if design and manufacturing practicality happen to align, it just means you're killing two birds with one stone. It doesn't necessarily mean that design was compromised for the sake of easy manufacturing.
It's like saying a painting was made to fit the frame, when it's more likely the frame was made to fit the painting, and the fact that it's a standard-size Ikea frame is more of a happy coincidence.
I played with them armless mini figures back in the day. I thought that maybe we had worn the faces off them. No mention of the larger figures with the giant heads and very flexible arms, torso was a regular four cube piece with extra bits for attaching the arms. Large caps as well. Very interesting.
Yes, a draft angle is important, but not to prevent a vacuum when the part is ejected. The forces of the ejector pins are way bigger than the force of the pressure difference on such a small piece.
I had a lot of LEGO in the 1960's and 1970's. My brother and I still have several of those early figures that look like petrol pumps. We used to put faces on with marker pens. I'm trying to collect the really nice 1/76 scale trucks - red plastic, silver metal wheels - made by LEGO in the 1960's. I had some, but they didn't survive. Great video, though. I still like the fact that LEGO is the world's largest manufacturer of tyres.
I really don’t think the design would be because of the draft angle.
If they had really wanted them to be rectangular they would have made them like all the other rectangular Lego pieces they make !!!!
It’s got to be for aesthetic reasons that they slope in at the shoulders.
Im pretty sure its a cosmetic choice.. regular bricks are 90°. I dont think lego has a problem with extracting bricks from molds. The figures would look dumb if they were square. Considering that this "draft angle" technique isnt seen anywhere else, i think youre wrong.
Super cool! I love how the design also takes the 4-stud width of the minifig into consideration. So the top width of the torso plus the arms/hands all fit within 4 studs.
And that’s also the reason why it’s so difficult to put 2 minifigs in the front seat of a 6 stud wide car lol!
“I don’t like Minifigures having noses”
Voldemort being the only Minifigure with a nose
The LEGO Skeleton comes close too, come to think of it... 🤔
Yeah... No.... That's probably not the reason why the torso is angled, that's probably just your opinion, man.
Fact is, I lost 11 minutes of my life nobody will give me back.
This was very well-explained, and it helps the community gain more appreciation for the engineering that goes into the evolution of this wonderful toy. However, your video title makes it sounds like Lego has been intentionally hiding a 'secret' from their customers, which looks like misleading clickbait to me.
this is preposterous. Why must that one piece have an external draft angle while everything else can be square and have them internally? That is not the reason for it being that shape, you literally made that up. Coming up with a possible reason for something isnt the same thing as finding the reason for it.
I think I have one of the old armless minifig torsos, it'd be neat to bring those back for use as a mannequin or training dummy.
Yeah, I doubt that Lego did the angle for the drafting alone. Likely it is just a bonus, the Figures (and why you dissing Nick and the technic figs? They got noses, ears too) were made in the shape of a humans torso.
This is rubbish! If they had to do this to the torso then they'd have to do it to all pieces yet obviously they don't. Are you just making up nonsense for views or do you have researched facts?
Love this video! Such fantastic technical detail. Thank you for sharing.
Technical detail? If you know anything about ejection moulding, you know this is a bull story.
Oh, it’s just draft angle. Kind of was expecting something more exiting. Anyways you start noticing draft angles in everything. From plastic, glass, sometimes metal. Everything manufactured needs to be able to be made as easily as possible, if you look at just about anything molded to can notice places where they need to hide seams and draft.
Well, Lego clearly makes square and cubic bricks, so how does this apply to that? I would guess they could use a blast of air inside the mould to release the pieces if the push pins really create a vacuum as significant as you said. How does it translate to and from the square bricks and the torso?
He explained this is the video, no? the draft for the cubic bricks is inside the brick, not on the outside like the Minifigure Torso
they explained that in the video, the draft is on the inside
there is draft inside lego bricks
The interlocking tube and voids around it on the inside of the brick have the draft angle
cuz the dude is wrong, lol, the reason the body is trapezoidal is so they can make the arm holes with a 2 piece mold. Has nothing to do with draft angles.
You take WAY to long to explain what draft angle is and why it's a thing. You say draft angle and look at this angle a million times and then when you finally describe it, you still take way to long, saying the same thing over and over before finally spitting it out. That should have taken less then a minute to explain clearly.
wow! this gave me an insight to why lego looks the way it is!! thanks for making this video, I subscribed, and shared this vid with my friends who love lego as well!
Ironically, Voldemort doesn't have a nose though he is one of the only minifigures to have nose print
What if Lego decided to make some of these old mini figure parts as a kind of anniversary thing
There’s like. Maybe 2 minutes of real information in this 10min video. The plot is very lost amongst useless dribble and pointles repetition.
You mention draft angles like four times before you get to explaning what they are, and the whole point is to explain what they are.
I am just thinking, where the draft is on a piece like 3065, 1x2 brick without any inside structure. This mold predates the normal 1x2 already existing in the 1950s and is only used for transparent colors today.
Looking at the early minifigs, and the preproduction prototypes you can see they wanted the feet and the center of the figure to be the same dimensions as a 2x1 plate, the stub arm policeman at 3:05 shows this clearly with a white stripe in the center. They went for a gentle houreglass shape to tie it all togethr, but later when they went for the full production figure they re did the feet and torso to look much more appealing, but still fitting the same aesthetic. Of course tehe feet still fit onto 2x1 studs but the torso doesnt quite have the same dimentions anymore, though internally it does fit.
Perhaps the best Lego video channel on UA-cam. I really like your work, it's so fascinating. Keep making this kind of content, I love Lego and its factory secret
Great channel, but no one can beat RR Slugger :)
i have a suggestion! i think it would be really cool if you released a ww2 us navy minifigure as such: sand blue torso with printed kapok life vest, dark blue legs with printed boots, and a light gray m1 steel pot helmet
Dude imagine an Isaac Clarke figure form dead space.
That earliest minifig head would look great as a robot head
Pretty cool. Didn’t know that. Makes the torso look nice too. Now I wonder why all the connections on the minifigure are different.
This is what I do everyday ,process technician, this is common practice in my everyday life
Thanks for sharing really good information. Would be great to own some old ones but I definitely prefer the new ones
I love the way they used one of the "slabbies" as a statue in set 1592: Town Square - Castle Scene.
I agree with other commenters. The draft angle is nice, but I think its an aesthetic choice.
Draft angle is irrelevant in modern injection molding. Modern molds have release vents that allow air into the mold negating vacuum suction
My god they look AI generated
Gotta fix that buzzing sound, don't you hear it?
So they're hiding a minifigure torso from us?? 😱🤯
Wow perfectly informative video, no one wanted, but damm we needed it thanks.
You do know that you can vent injection molds right? As well as many ejection types being air powered.....
I just came across your channel and even though as yet I've watched only the Draft Angle video I already think it's going to be some of the best Lego content on youtube.
Side note: seeing those older sets from the late 70s is always a bittersweet experience. I had an extraordinary collection of Lego when I was younger and I was always at my most content when building. Each minifig or group of minifigures had a backstory and many were good friends. I remember vividly the disbelief, shame and sadness I felt when without warning or sentiment my
Oh it's still too gut wrenching to go into.
Glad I checked the comments. This was a waste of time.
Not a subscriber but was really interested in the video. Great sounding theme too.
Unfortunately you lost me at 6 min in. The language you use makes me feel like you’re either trying cram extra segments in to run up the clock, or you just don’t remember what you’ve said/ worried about understanding so you double or triple down on saying things.
Not sure what the reason is but it felt like you were stringing me along. Also felt like those 5 min ads that have “a great technique” that they never mention and just want to sell a book or class.
Anyhow hope you continue to grow and good luck/ perseverance.
Payday inspired figures would be neat to see on brick tactical
I assumed that's why it was shaped that way. So this just made me glad I was right. I build a lot of gunpla so it made me curious about lego injection mold
You probably don’t like minifigs without noses because they haven’t in the past and it’s what your used to.
Less is more, and two dots and a line is perfect for a Lego face.
10 minutes of "explaining" something that's pretty obvious....
I thought you weren’t allowed to patent something you’ve been selling more than a year in advance of the patent application
The video is incorrect. I looked up the US patent, it was filed in February 1978 and granted in December 1979. I couldn't find the exact date of release of set 600-2, but if it didn't release after the patent it released less than two months before it.
@@shockthetoast great work! It got me curious because in the camera industry there's a company which holds a fraudulent patent on raw video, Nikon is trying to fight their patent through the argument that they started selling the camera before the patent was granted which allegedly makes the patent invalid.
@@definingslawek4731 Wow, I hadn't heard about that. Is this similar to the raw format for photos?
Ahhh... Briefness is mother of the talent. There is the reason for this...
Legend says he's still explaining what a draft angle is....
I am curious about how they use the draft angle on the inside of a brick to make it easier to eject bricks from the mold. It would seem like that wouldn't help, but presumably they can be creative in the mold design.
Doing a search, I see that the 1.5 degree draft angle on the inside isn't enough. There's an 0.5 degree draft angle on the outside of a LEGO brick too, and a fillet on the bottom to prevent it from being noticeable.
@@johnsavard7583 You're not "Quadibloc" are you? I LOVE your website, I flippin' LOVE it! Your designs for alternative camera filters are amazing just for the thought and imagination you put into them. I'd like to own a camera that can see in chartreuse! Honestly I've spent hours on the site over the years, loads of stuff I happen to be interested in. I've used it as an example in stuff I've been talking about to people online.
How do you mean a "fillet"? Explain in a bit more detail, please. Also others have mentioned there's no practical need for the torso to be this shape, that it's for the arm holes, or that it's just aesthetic. Any opinion?
bro ive been watching sence before the veitnam war moc i loved that series and i watched every episode so exited
Draft is very IM-PORT-TANT
I always thought they used compressed air instead of ejection pins since they don’t have outer draft angles.
Right. There's lots of compressed air available on production lines, half the machines run on it.
I think they use compressed air because it leaves no marks on the model. A lot of parts with right angles like bricks and plates have those marks, so having no outside draft angle is not the reason.
This video is a waste of time. You keep talking but you never get to a point.
If you'd named this video "10 boring minutes about injection moulding" you might not have got so many views. Lego don't "hide" manufacturing details from people, people just don't care. Very poor.
Oh in case anyone hasn't seen the video yet... You know how minifig bodies have a slope on each side? That slope allows air to slide in past it, when they remove the minifig from the mould that it's cast in. It it was just flat straight, they'd have had to... do something else instead. There. 10 minutes of your life back, my gift to you! I hope you enjoy them.
After 6 mins of watching this I lost interest. Nothing substantial just to prolong the video.
dude knows what the hell he’s talking about
Congrats on 100k!1!11!!!
You are too quick at the most important part.
The square bricks show that inside draft can be done. So the important part is, why didn't they do that on the torso.
You very briefly mention space, but that is the main issue and reason then. To have the torso small.
And I wouldn't say it's THE reason. It looks more natural, the arms look better, probably also something to do with the arm holes, which makes the mold more difficult.
For the rest, interesting video. Relax a bit.
I like this kind of videos :) bort engineering and lego :)
that is fascinating to learn about injection molding...
Best channel in the world!!!!!!
Why does the third minifig prototype look ai generated?
Was thinking the same thing. They look so glitchy and distorted, especially in the faces
Can you talk about the legs from the lego? Very nice video. Does the draft help to remove the arms?
That is hardly a "secret that lego has been keeping from us". Thanks for the clickbait
Do you ship to the UK?
This does not need to be 10 minutes
I don't agree. I think trapezoid form is more human like.
Good video. Good to have more videos on polymer processing
you should do iqs sunsplash pack uniform such and underrated cosmetic that would look nice on a minifigure
Why do they print a large black dot on the ‘neck’ of them?
The armless ones could make for a cool statue or something.
You mean like on the new LOTR sets? :D
The cop sticker looks AI generated
you should make a cod zombies mystery box
There was no reason for this video to be more than 5 minutes.
Super instructive, but this couldve easily been a short.
Thanks for the info nice vids
Thank you for taking 10 minutes to give a 5 second answer.
THE LORE GUYS THE LORE
What is the colored square on the nack of the torso piece for?
There is a 0,02 mm distance apart brick
How do they get the arms into the torso?
Can you make Thomas the train? Please
Shouldn't you file the patent before you release the product?
They did, this video seems to have mixed up when the patent was approved with when it was filed. (Filed February 1978, approved December 1979.)
So great! Love the engineering and technical explanation ❤
Id like to see some Chinese soldiers from ww2 on the website.
I have a hat from the oldest mini figure
I Love 💕💕💕💕💕💕 LEGOS SO MUCH.
Who cares dude. You just wasted 5 minutes of my precious life🤦♀️