75277 Boba Fett Helmet

Today we are finishing this series of three quick reviews of the LEGO Star Wars helmets "for adult fans" marketed this year with that of the set. 75277 Boba Fett Helmet (625 pieces - 59.99 €). The helmet to be assembled here is logically the most colorful of the three and in my opinion it is also the most successful, the model even affording the luxury of not using any sticker.

As with the other two models in the range, the internal structure of this helmet uses the principle of mixing colored bricks separated by plates that hold everything together. Small variation here which will be useful later during the construction process: a bar placed on one of the sides of the internal module on which the two sub-assemblies will be clipped which serve to reproduce the yellow bands seen on the reference model.

On the LEGO version there are only 12 "Jedi Kills Stripes"instead of the 14 which should have been integrated so as not to anger the most fundamentalist fans, but the reproduction of this detail without using one or more stickers is appreciable.

75277 Boba Fett Helmet

There is also another very appreciable detail in the upper area of ​​the model: the impact that slightly depressed and damaged Boba Fett's helmet, here reproduced with the help of a few gray parts. It is also this attention to detail on the part of the designer that makes me prefer this helmet to the other two.

The two sides of the model are not identical and the LEGO version is here too very convincing with very faithful colors and a sufficient level of detail that allow this exhibition product to be truly presentable from different angles. The range finder with holographic display placed on the right can be folded down to the face via a hinge integrated into the sub-assembly attached to the side of the helmet.

On the other hand, lovers of original techniques will appreciate the solution used to create the loudspeaker and the various details of the communication system integrated into the helmet. The back of the helmet in the LEGO version also conforms to the reference model, and the dedicated sub-assembly perfectly reproduces the red trench which serves as the cooling zone for the helmet's processor and which circulates there.

75277 Boba Fett Helmet

On the front, the designer is doing in my opinion honorably for such a complex model and on this scale. The two "cheeks" of the helmet clipped to the internal structure are sufficiently detailed and they frame at the right angle the central module which perfectly reproduces the lower zone of the visor.

The lower part of the helmet also uses many smooth parts and the contrast with the upper hemisphere and its visible studs is here very marked. I would have preferred a completely smooth surface for the top of the helmet, the tenons visible on the sides of the construction would have been enough to mark the "LEGO spirit" of the product wanted by the designers (see the designers interview).

Of the three available references, I think this one is the most interesting to build. We alternate the colors, we discover or we put into practice original techniques and the final result is very satisfactory. The alternation of colors on the different sub-assemblies also facilitates the understanding of the instructions and avoids the relative weariness encountered during the assembly of the two other models, almost monochrome.

75277 Boba Fett Helmet

Same remark as for the other two products in this range about the small pad printed presentation plate: The LEGO Star Wars logo is in my opinion superfluous here and there was probably better to do by taking advantage of the space available on the part used.

As I said during the test of the set 75274 Tie Fighter Pilot Helmet, I think this new collection takes on its full meaning when the different products that make it up are presented together.

Taken individually, the other two helmets in the range are visually a little sad and it is only when they are associated with this third reference that the whole takes a little cachet and that the concept reveals all its coherence and its potential. . However, if it was necessary to make a choice and buy only one of the three references marketed, I would be satisfied with this one.

A final criticism for the road: the packaging of these three helmets are much too big for what they contain and even if the marketing dictates its law, the logistics sometimes take care of reminding us that these very thin cardboard packaging do not support the transport.

Note: The three helmets in this collection are currently out of stock on the official online store, but I think they will be available again during the operation May the 4th which begins on May 1st.

Note: The product shown here, supplied by LEGO, is as usual in play. Deadline fixed at 9th May 2020 next at 23pm. 

Update : The winner was drawn and was notified by email, his nickname is indicated below. Without a response from him to my request for contact details within 5 days, a new winner will be drawn.

Nicobout - Comment posted the 28/04/2020 at 22:23

75277 Boba Fett Helmet

LEGO Star Wars 40407 Death Star II Battle (GWP)

Today we take a quick look at the LEGO Star Wars set 40407 Death Star II Battle which will be offered from 75 € purchase at LEGO from May 1 to 4, 2020, during the operation May the 4th.

You already know if you are used to the LEGO Star Wars range, this small box uses the principle of the micro-diorama already available in two other promotional sets: the references 40333 Battle of Hoth (set offered during the May the 4th operation in 2019) and 40362 Battle of Endor (set offered during Triple Force Friday in October 2019). We could almost add to this collection the small set 6176782 Escape the Space Slug offered in 2016 by LEGO and which serves as a pioneer in the Star Wars micro-diorama.

This year, we get a scene vaguely inspired by Episode VI (Return of the Jedi) which takes place on the surface of Death Star II with here an A-Wing pursued by a Tie Interceptor. We use the principle of the exhibition base assembled in SNOT version (Studs Not On Top) already used for the bases of the scenes proposed in sets 40333 and 40362 and the diorama here takes on a little volume and consistency thanks to the pillars covered with parts Dark Red and turret integrated. No surprise, with 235 pieces in the box, assembling the three-part base and the two ships only takes a few minutes.

LEGO Star Wars 40407 Death Star II Battle (GWP)

As with the other two sets based on the same concept, this diorama is dressed in a pad printed piece which reminds us here that this is a product from the LEGO Star Wars range and that we are in 2020. Too bad for consistency with the two other scenes offered in 2019 which were decorated with a plaque referring to the 20 years of the range.

Two micro-vessels are provided: an A-Wing, probably in reference to the one in the Ultimate Collector Series of set 75275 which will be marketed from May 1, 2020 and a Tie Interceptor which one wonders what it is doing there. The ship is present during the Battle of Endor seen in Episode VI but it does not seem to me to have seen an explicit pursuit scene between the two ships presented here on the surface of Death Star II.

On this scale, no miracle, the two ships consist of a few parts and are barely on the level of those we regularly get in the LEGO Star Wars Advent calendars and as with the other two existing micro-dioramas, it do not also be too careful on the global scale. Nothing prevents you from replacing the two ships with a little more consistent and detailed versions from polybags, for example the A-Wing of the polybag 30272, the presentation base will easily accommodate constructions on another scale. .

As this new product is a promotional item offered under condition of purchase, there is no reason not to add an additional micro-diorama to your collections as long as you plan to spend your money on the official online store on the dates. planned. These small thematic sets do not take up too much space, they are aesthetically rather successful and this format changes us a bit from the usual scale of classic sets. LEGO values ​​these boxes offered at 14.99 € (see the set sheet on the official online store) and I think that even if they were sold at this price, they would find their audience quite easily.

See you on May 1st for the launch of the offer which will allow you to be offered this small set from 75 € of purchase.

LEGO Star Wars 40407 Death Star II Battle (GWP)

Note: The product shown here, supplied by LEGO, is as usual in play. Deadline fixed at 6th May 2020 next at 23pm. the shipment of the prize to the winner will only take place when the sanitary situation allows it.

Update : The winner was drawn and was notified by email, his nickname is indicated below. Without a response from him to my request for contact details within 5 days, a new winner will be drawn.

Legonoblois - Comment posted the 26/04/2020 at 00:50

75274 Tie Fighter Pilot Helmet

Today we are quickly interested in the LEGO Star Wars set 75274 Tie Fighter Pilot Helmet (724 pieces - € 59.99), one of three boxes launched this year which allow you to assemble reproductions in LEGO versions of emblematic helmets from the Star Wars universe.

After the (almost) white version of the set 75276 Stormtrooper Helmet I was telling you about a few days ago, it is a question here of assembling the helmet of a pilot of Tie Fighter and it is thus logically very ... black. Of the three models currently released, only the Stormtrooper and Boba Fett models have black background pages in the instruction booklet. Here, for the sake of legibility of the assembly instructions, the pages are with a gray background as is the case for the vast majority of LEGO sets.

The principle of the internal structure that will accommodate the different textural elements remains very close to that used for the Stormtrooper helmet with colored parts, windows, hooks to fix the nose of the helmet and intermediate plates to stiffen everything. We also find over the pages some technical solutions identical to those used for the helmet of set 75276, in particular for the nose of the model. If you follow the assembly of the two models in question, you will realize it, but the phase of assembling the various modules which constitute the external texture of this helmet proposes some variations which will allow you to quickly forget these similarities.

The presentation base on which the small presentation plate is attached is identical to that of set 75276, it is logical and consistent to maintain a range effect even if I find more and more this plate with the big LEGO logo superfluous .

75274 Tie Fighter Pilot Helmet

The exterior texture of this helmet being black, we can distinguish here much less the colored parts that appeared between the different white sub-assemblies of the Stormtrooper helmet. The two gray pad-printed parts of the nose are bordered by two small stickers with in the end a rather hazardous alignment between the patterns of these different elements which spoils the visual rendering a little.

The other detail that saddens me about this model: the gray flexible tubes on which the 18 pieces are plugged which give their texture to the two pipes remain visible if you do not carefully distribute these pieces to hide them. There is still space when the 18 parts in question are in place and it is therefore necessary to tighten these elements on the very exposed portion of the curve to the detriment of the lower part of the pipe for an optimal rendering.

If you are an observer, you will understand that everything that is not on the sheet of stickers (see above) is pad printed. So we get two pretty Dish which attach to the front of the helmet and which largely contribute to giving a rounded (and smooth) effect to the upper part of the model.

This second helmet is one centimeter higher than that of the Stromtrooper (19 cm high, base included) and unlike the latter it benefits from an alternation between smooth areas and stepped studs on the upper part and on the back. rear of the model which I think is really beneficial for the overall aesthetic. This smooth headband accentuates the rounded effect of the helmet even if it also gives the impression that the product lacks volume in certain places, especially when viewed from the back.

75274 Tie Fighter Pilot Helmet

As for the Stormtrooper helmet that I presented to you a few days ago, it's up to everyone to see if this profusion of tenons and the staircase effect on the curves of the model suits you. The fact remains that the designer did what he could with the chosen scale and that he did not do too badly in my opinion once again.

This pilot's helmet being black, it will be necessary to work on the ambient lighting to expose it in its best light. It is also when several models are exposed side by side that this new collection takes on its full meaning in my opinion: these helmets certainly have their faults and their approximations, but the concept works rather well when several models are brought together and observed. 'a certain distance. I hope that LEGO will extend the experience with many other models, the helmet of Phasma, a red helmet of Sith Trooper or even versions for example based on the helmets of the Mandalorian seen in the Disney + series and Sabine Wren (Rebels ) would ultimately be welcome.

Note: The product shown here, supplied by LEGO, is as usual in play. Deadline fixed at 5th May 2020 next at 23pm. the shipment of the prize to the winner will only take place when the sanitary situation allows it.

Update : The winner was drawn and was notified by email, his nickname is indicated below. Without a response from him to my request for contact details within 5 days, a new winner will be drawn.

The afol gardois - Comment posted the 27/04/2020 at 00:17

75274 Tie Fighter Pilot Helmet

76148 Spider-Man vs. Doc Ock

We continue the tour of 2020 novelties around the Spider-Man universe with the LEGO Marvel set 76148 Spider-Man vs. Doc Ock (234 pieces - 29.99 €). This box features a new Spider-Cycle which vaguely recalls the version of the set 76113 Spider-Man Bike Rescue (2019), but here the machine has a transformation "function". Indeed, the motorcycle includes a detachable element which allows Spider-Girl to also have a vehicle to face Octopus and try to recover the 200 dollars that the villain stole somewhere.

The initial idea is not bad, I am still interested in the modularity of a machine capable of splitting into several sub-vehicles and this is a mechanical spider separated into two elements that come to clip on the sides of the motorcycle. Overall, the "assembled" version of the bike remains acceptable, although there is only room for Spider-Man on the vehicle.

Once the mechanical spider has been removed and assembled, the bike, on the other hand, looks less proud with its visible blue pins. For its part, the mechanical spider benefits from very limited mobility and the only points of articulation are placed at the level of the "claws", the rest of the frame of the construction being fixed. No controllers for Spider Girl, she's just sitting on her spider, her arms dangling.

76148 Spider-Man vs. Doc Ock

76148 Spider-Man vs. Doc Ock

Only the motorcycle is equipped with two Stud Shooters placed at the front of the vehicle and the mechanical spider has no coin launcher. The gameplay is therefore a little limited even if we can pretend that Spider-Girl throws webs using the complete assortment of white pieces provided. It should be noted that Spider-Man adopts as usual a driving position that is far from natural.

The Spider-Cycle is equipped with the rims already seen on Black Panther's bike in the set 76142 Avengers Speeder Bike Attack  and on the AIM machine seen in the set 76143 Avengers Truck Takedown. This element that I find very successful will eventually arrive one day on the chassis of a vehicle in a LEGO Creator Expert box or a set from the Technic range ...

As for the three figurines delivered in this box, it is minimum service: The Spider-Man minifigure, the other very common variant in recent years with its legs injected in two colors, is the one already seen in the sets 76113 Spider-Man Bike Rescue (2019) 76114 Spider-Man's Spider Crawler (2019) 76115 Spider Mech vs. Venom (2019) 76150 Spiderjet vs. Venom Mech (2020) et 76163 Venom Crawler (2020)

The torso and head of Doc Ock are the elements already delivered in 2019 in the set 76134 Doc Ock Diamond Heist and the hair provided here already equipped several versions of the character marketed since 2004. The exoskeleton is here dressed in stickers which do the job quite well by bringing an additional level of detail to all the parts that form the mechanical appendages of the character.

76148 Spider-Man vs. Doc Ock

The Anya Corazon (Earth-616) figurine delivered in this box is the only one to be unseen and it is currently exclusive to this box. It takes over the hair of many "civilians" seen in different sets of the LEGO CITY range and on the head of Toryn Farr (Star Wars) or Erin Gilbert (Ghostbusters). To really stick to the character's outfit and offer a more successful finish, a few white lines on the legs of the minifigure would have been welcome. The design of the torso is very correct here, but like the Ghost Spider minifigure in the set 76149 The Menace of Mysterio, the spider-shaped black area turns gray and looks a bit sloppy to me.

According to the official descriptions provided by the manufacturer, this is not the first time that Spider-Girl has made an appearance in a LEGO set. The character was indeed indicated as delivered in 2016 in the box 76057 Spider-Man: Web Warriors Ultimate Bridge Battle, even if we remember that it was then in fact Spider-Woman in Ultimate version, more than Spider-Girl.


76148 Spider-Man vs. Doc Ock

In summary, for a collector, this box is only of interest for the original minifig it allows to obtain, the rest being already seen or dispensable. For the little ones, there's plenty of fun with an acceptable 2-in-1 vehicle and a super villain to fight. € 30 for all that, however, is a bit expensive. As usual, patience will be rewarded with a few euros saved at Amazon and others within a few months.

Note: The set presented here, supplied by LEGO, is as usual in play. Deadline fixed at 3th May 2020 next at 23pm. No emergency for the draws, the shipments will only take place when the sanitary situation allows it.

20/04/2020 - 18:55 In my opinion... Lego news Reviews

75276 Stormtrooper Helmet

Today we take the tour of the LEGO Star Wars set 75276 Stormtrooper Helmet  (647 pieces - 59.99 €), a product clearly identified by LEGO as intended for an audience of adult fans, or at least major. The objective here is to start a collection of helmets from the Star Wars universe, a collection which currently consists of three references and whose future will probably depend on the commercial success of the various products launched this year.

The (too) big packaging announces the color, here we do not have fun, we collect and we exhibit. The product is also staged in a context a little more "luxurious" than usual with an instruction booklet with a glued square back and pages on a black background reminiscent of those in the Architecture range booklets.

Even if I stuck a minifigure next to the helmet on some photos, I think the product is sufficient on its own without the presence of a Stormtrooper figurine in the box: the target audience for these products is much larger that of LEGO fans and this attempt to appeal to an audience of fans of exhibition products based on the saga must in my opinion focus on the essentials. Despite everything, I find that LEGO was a little shy on this issue in terms of the scale of the final product: this helmet is finally only 13x13x13 cm without the base which allows it to take a little height and reach 18 cm from above.

If the finished product is relatively sober, the first stages of construction are a little more festive with an assortment of colored parts to assemble to constitute the "skeleton" of the model. Some will undoubtedly appreciate this visual distraction and the techniques used to make this part of the product before embarking on the assembly of the two-tone texture of the helmet, for my part I am very insensitive.

As for the ship in the set 75252 UCS Imperial Star Destroyer, I find that these colored insides distort the experience of assembling this collector's product a bit, but it's very personal. What is less is that several of these colored parts remain visible from certain angles on the final model, by small touches certainly, but they break a little the uniformity of the external texture of the helmet.

75276 Stormtrooper Helmet

No big surprise here, when the internal structure is assembled, we start to add the different textured elements with large visible stud reinforcements that will gradually give its final shape to this Stormtrooper helmet. The designer is doing in my opinion honorably given the scale chosen and the curves and other hooks to reproduce. We could discuss certain angles or certain volumes, but in my opinion it is useless to seek absolute fidelity to the reference model on this scale.

There are still a few empty spaces here and there, but observed from a reasonable distance, this helmet therefore seems rather faithful to the model from which it is inspired. The tastes and colors are indisputable and some will appreciate this rendering all to the glory of the brand and its Studs where others would have preferred a slightly smoother finish.

The helmet being mostly white, it is difficult to escape two aesthetic flaws that are really obvious: the white parts are not all "the same white", with variations ranging from cold white to creamy white, and the different stickers to sticking on the model, however, they are printed on a really white background. This patchwork of hues is a bit annoying on a high-end product intended for exhibition and whose pieces can only tarnish a little more over time.

As you have noted, the black base is dressed with a small pad printed plate which reminds us that this is a helmet of ... Stormtrooper. By putting a smaller logo, there was room to possibly print a few facts on the character concerned, just to reinforce the premium aspect of the product a little.

75276 Stormtrooper Helmet

Was there a different scale (and higher price) for these models to be considered in order to be able to fine-tune the level of detail of the product? Maybe yes. As it stands, there are a lot of aesthetic compromises that a LEGO fan will gladly forgive as they know and understand the limitations of the brand's concept. I'm not sure that a collector of Star Wars merchandise accustomed to high-end models offered by other manufacturers is so forgiving and understanding. The future will tell.

Concerning the target of the product clearly identified on the packaging via the 18+ classification, the construction experience does indeed call for some unusual techniques but it does not require any particular know-how to reach the end of the model. A child used to putting together LEGO sets will do well. The product does not offer any playability beyond the assembly phase, it is above all in the sense that it is intended for an adult audience.

In short, if you like LEGOs and the Star Wars universe, this product is for you: It reproduces an emblematic element of the saga, it does not take up too much space and it costs only 60 €. You will find a place available on a corner of the shelf to display this helmet and display your passion for the universe in question without cluttering your living room. If you are a fan of derivative products without necessarily being a fan of LEGO, this product is probably not the ultimate LEGO version mockup you were hoping for despite its large attractive box.

Note: The product shown here, supplied by LEGO, is as usual in play. Deadline fixed at 2th May 2020 next at 23pm. the shipment of the prize to the winner will only take place when the sanitary situation allows it.

Update : The winner was drawn and was notified by email, his nickname is indicated below. Without a response from him to my request for contact details within 5 days, a new winner will be drawn.

DonutsMan - Comment posted the 23/04/2020 at 21:03