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When we speak of MOC or diorama, we always evoke a creation designed to reconstitute a scene, an event, a machine, a place, etc ...
And among the enthusiasts who challenge themselves through their MOCs, we find people who are ready for anything: devote endless hours to it, start over and over again until obtaining the desired result, make and undo, build and destroy , to lose patience sometimes but always with the concern of a certain perfection.
Legomaniac is of the race of those who go to the end. At the end of the project, at the end of the concept, exploiting again and again the slightest possibility of improving his work.
Right here, Legomaniac shared his adventure with this MOC. He posted, regularly, on the Brickpirate forum, as if he were looking for confirmation, criticism or external glances on the direction his creation was taking to ultimately deliver this visual which brings together long hours of work, patience, adjustments, and certainly doubts, want to compromise.
I went through the process of creating this visual and I admire the patience and conviction of this guy that I only know through a forum and a few more personal message exchanges. I also envy him for his perseverance and relentlessness.
If you want to know more about the process of creating this visual where everything is just LEGO and know-how, without assembly or modification, go read the relevant topic. You will learn how Legomaniac made rain fall on a Gotham City where each building you see on visual has been reconstructed and lit, you will discover how he created his bat-signal and you will be able to watch the different shots necessary to obtain this result .
For my part, I am content to simply say: Hats off to the artist.
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