Category: LEGO Nintendo

  • How To Get The Monty Mole & Super Mushroom GWP Set

    How To Get The Monty Mole & Super Mushroom GWP Set

    Way back when LEGO opened up pre-orders for the Super Mario Starter Set, there was a free Gift With Purchase set came with every 71360 Adventures with Mario Starter Course that was ordered: 40414 Monty Mole & Super Mushroom. Pre-orders sold out lightning quick and thus this exclusive and elusive boxed set was going to be difficult but fear not, you may still have a chance if you live near a LEGO Brand Retail location. Give your local store a call and see if they have any Monty Mole sets leftover AND if they have the Starter Set available. You can only get the Monty Mole set with the purchase of the starter. Some stores may be allowing phone orders with curbside pick-up only. Some may even let you in the store by an appointment. You’ll have to call and find out. Me personally, I lucked out by calling my store at about 1:30pm yesterday afternoon and they still had stock. Some stores even received more Monty Moles than Starter Sets, so you may even be able to get one at a later date once stock of the Starters replenishes.

    Your mileage may vary obviously, depending on your state, county, or even city is handling physical distancing guidelines, safety measures, and which businesses can open.

  • All The New Stuff LEGO Is Releasing Tomorrow 8/1

    All The New Stuff LEGO Is Releasing Tomorrow 8/1

    Update: Forgot they were releasing 43179 Mickey Mouse & Minnie Mouse Buildable Characters too. It doesn’t seem to be too popular because it’s still available to add to bag and not back ordered on the Shop@Home site like the other releases from today.

    Also, the Harry Potter sets continue to be benched. A 4/30 pre-order date never materialized, the 8/1 shipping date doesn’t seem to be true either as they are all still listed as “Coming Soon”. Not sure what’s going on with that.

    Star Wars seems to have been pushed back to September 1 but maybe I just got that wrong entirely. Oops. Sorry. I’ve cleaned up the original post below and removed HP and SW listings. My apologies for any confusion.

    Original article, edited for clarity:

    Tomorrow is August 1, and a ton of new stuff is going to put on sale. It’s quite possible it may go up on 9pm tonight Pacific Time, or midnight if you’re on the opposite coast. Here’s a rundown (FBTB is an affiliate partner with LEGO Shop@Home, so if you click through any of the links and make any purchases, we may get a small commission):

    LEGO Super Mario

    The full range of LEGO Super Mario products will be available: the base Starter Set, Power Up packs, and Expansions Sets. You’ll need the base set, 71360 Adventures with Mario Starter Course, to get Mario and for the other sets to really mean anything other than just a pile of bricks with weird stickers.

    Here’s the entire list:

    You should also head out to your local big box retailer. They may or may not have some promotional polybag sets too.

    UCS Nintendo Entertainment System

    This is number one on my hit list for tomorrow, 71374 Nintendo Entertainment System. It may even replace my UCS R2-D2 in my giant bell jar display. Price is $229.99 which feels right, but $199.99 would have felt better. It’s like that Camper Van being $119.99 instead of $99.99.

    LEGO Art Iron Man

    Revealed earlier today, the Iron Man wall art portrait will be also be available. Cost is $119.99. You can build one of three portraits, or buy three to display all three at the same time or combine them to create this larger image:

    LEGO Piano

    Revealed last week, the LEGO Ideas Grand Piano set will be available for $349.99.

    Remember that feeling I had when LEGO introduced the gross $700 UCS Star Destroyer? I’m starting to get that feeling again. Especially looking at that piano. Especially now given the pandemic. I get that LEGO has a product roadmap they need to stick to a release cycle. No doubt that they are profiting quite nicely from parents looking for things to do while stuck at home if the bare shelves at Target and Walmart are any indication. But still, I can’t help but feel a bit nauseous. Yet here I am counting down the time until I can get my hands on the LEGO Super Mario stuff.

    Again, links should be live by 9pm Pacific Time tonight. Otherwise, try again tomorrow.

  • LEGO Sends Official Nintendo Entertainment System NES Set Images

    LEGO Sends Official Nintendo Entertainment System NES Set Images

    Update: Added more pictures to the gallery below.

    Not much to add that I haven’t already said in yesterday’s post revealing 71374 Nintendo Entertainment System. They did confirm a few things:

    • The price is officially $229.99.
    • The interactivity with the Mario brick won’t have him play the theme song, but instead has him react “to on-screen enemies, obstacles and power-ups just as he would have in the iconic Super Mario Bros. game.”
    • The release date is August 1st, 2020 at both Brand Retail locations and online.

    In addition to the pictures and press release, LEGO sent over this bizarrely silent “lifestyle” video. It’s completely noise-free except for when the guy puts the Mario figure on top of the TV:

     

    You weren’t an ’80s gamer unless you did this:

    The console is beautiful!

    Here’s a good shot of the cartridge:

    Here’s the official announcement video they included in the press kit:

     

    And finally, here are the pictures, with press release below that:

    71374 Nintendo Entertainment System Pictures

     

    71374 Nintendo Entertainment System Press Release

    The LEGO Group introduces LEGO® edition of classic
    Nintendo Entertainment System™

    The LEGO Group and Nintendo build on LEGO® Super Mario™ partnership with this new LEGO® Nintendo Entertainment System™ and 1980s-style TV that let adult fans recreate Super Mario Bros.™ gameplay and rekindle nostalgic NES memories.

    BILLUND, July 14, 2020: The LEGO Group today announced a LEGO® Nintendo Entertainment System™ (NES) Building Kit for adults, letting grown-up fans create their own NES console with LEGO bricks. The new kit, the latest product of the LEGO Group and Nintendo partnership, offers a brick-built NES model packed with realistic details, including the accompanying 1980’s style LEGO television set, so nostalgic gamers and LEGO fans can recreate their favorite Super Mario Bros.™ childhood experiences.

    Today’s announcement will let adult fans take a trip down memory-lane by building a mechanically functional version of an all-time favourite console with LEGO bricks. The new NES Building Kit will include a controller with a connecting cable and plug and even an opening slot for the Game Pak with a locking feature. The console also comes with a buildable retro TV, featuring a flat 8-bit Mario figure on the scrolling screen. Fans can scan an included action brick with LEGO® Mario™ from the LEGO Super Mario Starter Course, so he reacts to on-screen enemies, obstacles and power-ups just as he would have in the iconic Super Mario Bros. game.

    “Super Mario has been a cherished figure in the gaming world for over thirty years now,” said Maarten Simons, Creative Lead on LEGO Nintendo Entertainment System™, the LEGO Group. “Many adults still fondly remember that first time they saw Mario leap across the small screen, even if the graphics were a lot simpler than they are today. With the LEGO Nintendo Entertainment System, we’re letting them truly indulge in that nostalgia, recreating one of the most-loved consoles of all time so they can see the Super Mario from their childhoods once again – and even to share the experience of gaming in the 1980s with their own children.”

    The LEGO Group and Nintendo announced their partnership earlier this year, bringing a fun-packed LEGO Super Mario universe to life through a Super Mario Starter Course set that exclusively features a LEGO Mario figure who displays a wide variety of instant reactions to movement, color and various action bricks. This entry point set was followed up on in May with a series of Power-Up Packs and in June with the announcement of a range of Expansion Sets and collectible Character Packs. All have been designed to build out the world of LEGO Super Mario, letting players unleash their creativity by building exactly the levels and challenges they want to see LEGO Mario and friends compete in.

    This highly collectible NES building set is part of a range of inspirational LEGO models designed for discerning hobbyists, as they look for their next immersive challenge. The LEGO NES will be available exclusively from LEGO Retail Stores and LEGO.com from August 1st 2020. From 2021 it will be available also at other leading retailers around the world.

    The full LEGO Super Mario product line also launches August 1st and will be available directly from LEGO Stores and www.LEGO.com as well as at leading retailers around the world.

    The update was shared in a video posted by the LEGO Group and Nintendo earlier today and on the LEGO Super Mario website at www.LEGO.com/SuperMario.

  • UCS Nintendo Entertainment System NES Set Incoming

    UCS Nintendo Entertainment System NES Set Incoming

    This was really nice to wake up to. Spotted over on a Hong Kong gaming website, VJ Gamer, there is going to be a UCS-style NES on the horizon, 71374 Nintendo Entertainment System. Is this an elaborate fake? Nah, ’cause LEGO teased it on their social media this morning.

    You get a retro style TV that appears to have a scrolling screen. Spin the crank on the side of the TV and the screen and Mario move. It makes me wonder if the TV will accept a Power Functions motor to automate the hand crank.

    That Mario? It appears to be a one-off mold.

    That TV isn’t just a pretty face. It’s complete front-to-back with AV cable input, vents, antenna, and a device label. Actual cables to plug the system into the TV seems to be completely absent though. Hopefully, cables are included because that would seem like an oversight if they weren’t.

    Speaking of system, it’s complete with a cartridge and one controller.

    No doubt that the printed tiles are pretty sweet.

    This isn’t just a pretty shelf or desktop ornament either. Plug in a Super Mario smart figure from the starter set and you’ll get some kind of interactivity. Kind of hard to read exactly what happens because of the way the photo is taken, but I’m gonna guess that as you turn the crank on the side of the TV, Mario will play the theme music.

    As far as dimensions, I’ve gone ahead and converted the measurements for you:

    • TV measures 9.4 inches wide x 8.9 inches high.
    • Console measures 8.2 inches wide x 2.9 inches high.
    • Controller measures 5 inches wide x 2 inches high.

    The console is smaller than the original NES (10.125 inches x 3.375 inches) and is nearly the exact same size as the NES Classic Edition (8.86 inches x 2.95 inches). The controller is nearly identical in size as the original.

    The alleged price is $250 dollars. I’m going to guess the release date is the same as the rest of the LEGO Super Mario line: August 1st. I can’t wait because this is more like a normal LEGO set and more inline with what I would expect from the collaboration. If I was hesitant about getting the Starter Set or the rest of the line, it would be worth it alone to put Mario on top of the TV.

    All images lifted from VJ Gamer

     

  • LEGO and Nintendo Show Off The Entire Super Mario Line

    LEGO and Nintendo Show Off The Entire Super Mario Line

    LEGO posted a press release detailing the entire upcoming Super Mario line, and there’s a lot. All the pictures they shared are below, along with prices and piece counts. The release date for this is pegged at August 1st. You can still pre-order the first set they announced, 71360 Adventures with Mario Starter Course for $59.99. The others are not pre-orderable yet but we’ll be putting down affiliate links anyway just in case you decide to buy later. But first, a video:

    This is going to be a long post, so be prepared to scroll. We’ll start with the sets and then the press release at the very end. I’m only including the pictures that were part of the press kit download. There are more pictures and details on each of the respective product pages so click on through to see more.

    My thought are at the very bottom of this article.

    Starter Course

    71360 Adventures with Mario Starter Course

    71360 Adventures with Mario Starter Course | $59.99 | 231 pieces

    Check out our reaction post when the first set was revealed: Nintendo Released a LEGO Super Mario Video, It Is Not What I Was Expecting, and We Break Down What We See.

    Expansion sets

    71362 Guarded Fortress Expansion Set

    71362 Guarded Fortress Expansion Set | $49.99 | 468 pieces

    71363 Desert Pokey Expansion Set

    71363 Desert Pokey Expansion Set | $19.99 | 180 pieces

    71364 Whomp’s Lava Trouble Expansion Set

    71364 Whomp’s Lava Trouble Expansion Set | $19.99 | 133 pieces

    71365 Piranha Plant Power Slide Expansion Set

    71365 Piranha Plant Power Slide Expansion Set | $29.99 | 217 pieces

    71366 Boomer Bill Barrage Expansion Set

    71366 Boomer Bill Barrage Expansion Set $29.99 | 132 pieces

    71367 Mario’s House & Yoshi Expansion Set

    71367 Mario’s House & Yoshi Expansion Set | $29.99 | 205 pieces

    71368 Toad’s Treasure Hunt Expansion Set

    71368 Toad’s Treasure Hunt Expansion Set | $69.99 | 464 pieces

    71369 Bowser’s Castle Boss Battle Expansion Set

    71369 Bowser’s Castle Boss Battle Expansion Set | $99.99 | 1,010 pieces

    71376 Thwomp Drop Expansion Set

    71376 Thwomp Drop Expansion Set | $39.99 | 393 pieces
    * available only with select retailers

    71377 King Boo and the Haunted Yard Expansion Set

    71377 King Boo and the Haunted Yard Expansion Set | $49.99 | 431 pieces
    * available only with select retailers

    Power-up Packs

    Check out our initial coverage of the Power-up Packs when they were announced a few weeks back: New LEGO Super Mario Power Packs Announced

    71370 Fire Mario Power-Up Pack

    71370 Fire Mario Power-Up Pack | $9.99 | 11 pieces

    71371 Propeller Mario Power-Up Pack

    71371 Propeller Mario Power-Up Pack | $9.99 | 13 pieces

    71372 Cat Mario Power-Up Pack

    71372 Cat Mario Power-Up Pack | $9.99 | 11 pieces

    71373 Builder Mario Power-Up Pack

    71373 Builder Mario Power-Up Pack | $9.99 | 10 pieces

    Character Packs

    71361 Character Packs

    71361 Character Packs | $4.99

    Thoughts

    • Not sure why the bullet in 71366 Boomer Bill Barrage Expansion Set is called “Boomer Bill”. At first I thought it was LEGO being sensitive to current events and renaming “Bullet Bill” to something pertaining less to guns but that didn’t make much sense since there is Bullet Bill character in the 71361 CMF packs.
    • The centerpiece of the entire line, Super Mario, is only available in one set: 71360 Adventures with Mario Starter Course. The promo photos for the different Power-up Packs are a bit misleading since they show Mario in each suit, but the Power-up Packs only contain the hat and the overalls. I think this is a smart move as people who may want to buy the entire collection won’t be stuck with Marios they don’t want or need. Obviously by not including a Mario in a set, it can keep the price down a bit. The ratio is already skewed so I can’t imagine how much the cost would go up by including an electronic robot. The starter set is $59.99 and only 231 pieces, but one of those pieces has bluetooth, color sensors, an LCD screen, and an accelerometer.
    • I was hesitant about the line, but I’m mostly on board now. Having all of the characters be brick-built is going to take some more time to get used to though. I may feel differently once I get the product in my hands and experience it myself. That being said, I still want minifigs and traditional LEGO sets.
  • New LEGO Super Mario Power Packs Announced

    New LEGO Super Mario Power Packs Announced

    LEGO and Nintendo continue to drip-feed more details about the upcoming LEGO Super Mario release. Today, they announced new Power Packs allowing you to dress Mario up in different suits. Which means, mind blown, that you can dress Mario up in different suits! Four new suits were revealed today allowing you to instantly unlock new abilities and new ways to play.

    Each Power Pack will cost you $9.99 USD and will launch alongside 71360 Adventures with Mario Starter Course (FBTB will earn a small commission). No sign of a Tanooki Suit Mario Power-Up Pack which is a real shame.

    Pictures and details are below (lifted from their press release):

    71370 Fire Mario Power-Up Pack

    71370 Fire Mario Power-Up Pack

    When LEGO® Mario™ is powered up with this suit, he can gain Fire Attack power – a new way to attack enemies and collect extra coins.

    71370 Fire Mario Power-Up Pack 01

    71371 Propeller Mario Power-Up Pack

    71371 Propeller Mario Power-Up PackPropeller sounds are triggered when players dress LEGO® Mario™ in this suit and make him ‘fly’ to try and win coins. The propeller suit allows LEGO Mario™ to take to the skies, making new sounds as he soars through the air and collects coins. Take LEGO Mario™ on an action-packed flight and turn your living room into a giant LEGO Super Mario™ level!

    71371 Propeller Mario Power-Up Pack 01

    71372 Cat Mario Power-Up Pack

    71372 Cat Mario Power-Up Pack

    This suit gives LEGO® Mario™ cat-like skills. Dress him in the special pants and cap and he’ll start to meow and purr. Wearing this suit gives Cat Mario™ the special power to walk up vertical obstacles and collect coins. It’s the purr-fect way to have even more fun with the LEGO Super Mario™ levels.

    71372 Cat Mario Power-Up Pack 01

    71373 Builder Mario Power-Up Pack

    71373 Builder Mario Power-Up PackWhen LEGO® Mario™ is wearing this suit, players can earn digital coins by making him stomp hard on LEGO bricks in the course they have created. The more he stomps, the more coins you win! It’s a brick-bashingly brilliant way to have even more fun with the LEGO Super Mario™ levels.

    71373 Builder Mario Power-Up Pack 01

    Additional Photos

  • More LEGO Super Mario Information, Pre-Order Bundles With Bonus GWP Set Sold Out

    More LEGO Super Mario Information, Pre-Order Bundles With Bonus GWP Set Sold Out

    LEGO put out some more official information for the first few sets from the LEGO Nintendo partnership. More pictures and details for the first set, 71360 Adventures with Mario Starter Course, were released as well as a sneak peek into the next two DLC Expansion Sets. Here’s what we’ve learned today. But first, a video!

     

    The video reveals a lot. First up, it shows just how small the Starter Course is. This is the base set with no expansions. LEGO is asking for $59.99 for 231 pieces. I know. It’s approaching Duplo pricing. Obviously a HUGE part of the cost is the Mario figure. Once you wrap your head around that, it doesn’t seem so bad. Or maybe it does. I don’t know; I’m still trying to process.

    From the initial reveal of the LEGO Nintendo partnership, we discovered the Super Mario brick had a camera, a speaker, Bluetooth connectivity, and a LCD screens for his eyes, mouth, and chest piece. Today, we also learned from this video that the brick also has an accelerometer and a gyroscope. Both of those may explain the eye movements. It takes 2x AAA batteries to power up Mario, and batteries are not included.

    The press release also details that there will be a companion app available and, by the sounds of it, will not be required:

    Fans will also love the free LEGO® Super Mario™ app by the LEGO Group, a supporting feature to further enhance the physical play experience. It keeps track of scores to encourage continuous rebuilding, as well as it provides digital building instructions with zoom and rotate viewing tools to make building easier, suggests other creative ways to build and play, and is a safe forum to share ideas with friends.

    “Supporting feature to further enhance the physical play experience.”

    There are two expansions also revealed in the video: 71365 Piranha Plant Power Slide and 71369 Bowser’s Castle Boss Battle. The Piranha Plant Power Slide includes two Piranha Plants, a Goomba, and a Koopa Troopa and will cost $29.99 USD. Bowser’s Castle Boss Battle includes Bowser, a Dry Bones, a Boo, and a Lava Bubble and will cost $99.99 USD.

    I don’t think the Starter Course costing $59.99 is an accident. Sixty bucks is pretty much the going price for any game from a major publisher. And I’d bet two whole cents that was the reason why they came to this price point for the starter set: they wanted to make the entry point familiar and affordable. It’s hard to gauge how much actual play value is in this set. Compared to a video game that can offer hours and hours of play time, there are no details on the companion app, how to play, objectives, or goals, or anything else. All we’ve seen so far are kids moving Mario around the board. But since the medium is LEGO, one can argue you’d get an infinite amount of playtime from the just the medium itself.

    I’m still on the fence as to how I feel about this. I want to like it, but so far I’m not that impressed. I’m probably in the minority because the Super Mario Starter Course bundle that LEGO offered seems to be sold out now. The bundle costed $59.99, included 71360 Adventures with Mario Starter Course, and threw in a bonus DLC of Monty Mole & Super Mushroom Expansion Set (pictured above) for free.

    All of the LEGO Super Mario sets are scheduled to release on August 1st.

    All The Pictures

     

  • Nintendo Released a LEGO Super Mario Video, It Is Not What I Was Expecting, and We Break Down What We See

    Nintendo Released a LEGO Super Mario Video, It Is Not What I Was Expecting, and We Break Down What We See

    The above video was published on Nintendo’s YouTube channel giving the world a sneak peek into what the upcoming LEGO Super Mario theme will look like. I don’t know what I was expecting, but it wasn’t this. Let’s break down what the video shows us.

    Mario Is Gigantic and For Good Reasons

    He’s an electronic toy complete with LCD screens for the eyes, mouth, and chest.  Though it’s probably one LCD screen with specific zones, like how they made the 2DS with one screen.

    He’s battery operated and bluetooth enabled. You can also see a small grill on the back of the head for the speaker.

    He’s got a camera up his butt and a little LED light. You can see the LED light reflecting off of the plates above.

    The camera can scan bar code tiles. I’m 99% sure that’s a sticker. The barcode is identifiable to the interactive element by the icon on the top right corner. This one is for the Piranha Plant.  The camera also detect colored plates so Mario can react accordingly.

    Here’s he’s placed on some red tile and Mario throws up a lava icon on his chest, distressed eyes, and plays sound effects.

    Mushroom Kingdom Cronies

    The video also gives us a preview of some of the denizens of Mushroom Kingdom.

    Here’s a Goomba. Based on the way it looks, I’m gonna guess the face is a printed element. The feet look to be a unique mold. That cloud tile element is also new as far as I can tell.

    Piranha Plant sticking out of a pipe. You get a good look at the inside of the single-piece pipe element.

    Like the Goomba, Bowser Jr. looks to be sporting more printed elements. The mouth is particularly interesting as it appears to be on a 2×4 tile with rounded corners. Here’s another view of Bowser Jr. on his side:

    You can also see the custom shell element. There’s a barcode sticker on the back so when you stop on him with Mario, Mario animates and plays sound.

    Yoshi has a ton of things going on. Check out his shell on the back. I couldn’t find a spot in the video showing the front Yoshi though.

    Here’s a cap that shows a Koopa Troopa, Blooper, and Lava Bubble.

    Other than Mario being one giant electronic brick, everyone else who are shown are brick-built figures with varying degrees of success. Yoshi looks particular well done, but that Goomba is an eyesore.

    Let’s Talk About That Flag

    Near the end of the video, when the kid moves Mario from one space to the one in front of the flag, Mario’s eyes animate. You can see him above with his eye’s looking left towards the flag. I downloaded the video and stepped through the sequence frame-by-frame. It starts at about the 40 second mark. When Mario is placed in front of the flagpole his eyes are now looking up towards the flag.

    Mario’s eyes tracking the flag could have just been a serendipitous event luckily caught by the camera. Or that flag or flagpole or the base of the flagpole has a bluetooth transmitter where Mario reacts to it based on his proximity. After all, there is a bluetooth button on the back to enable discovery. So far, we’ve only seen his camera working to enable all of the animations and sounds when interacting with the other elements by scanning barcodes.

    The bluetooth obviously has to serve a purpose, and it could just be another for Mario to interact with other elements without the need of a barcode. Perhaps with other figures? Or a flagpole even. Unknown so far what exactly is happening but it’s fun to speculate until we get further details or the sets in our hands.

    World 1-1 in LEGO or How To Play LEGO Super Mario

    This is the complete layout of what I assume to be a level. It doesn’t seem to be based on any real game layout as it is a hodgepodge of various levels. There’s a water, lava, grass,, and mountain areas. Well, to be honest, i’m not sure if they’re called mountains or hills. It’s those platforms where there’s grass on top and then sheer rock below where you can fall to your death. Anyways, the last title card of the video says “Multiple sets shown” so I’m guessing each of those environments are different sets that you build and connect. You stick the beginning pipe on one end and the flag on the other and make your way across.

    You start the level by sticking Mario in the beginning pipe to activate the timer. Progression through the level is still a bit of a mystery to me. Does Mario put up a random number to move him across sections? Is there a dice roll that we just haven’t seen yet?

    This does seem to be a timed activity because at some point the timer reaches 15 seconds and the fast music starts to play. If the goal is to reach the flag within a minute, what’s the mechanic that’s preventing someone from just picking up Mario from the warp pipe at the beginning and placing him in front of the flag at the end. The Mario video games doesn’t let you do that since it’s a linear game and everything in the level is an obstacle. Goomba’s need to be stomped on or fireballed, Piranha Plants need to be avoided, hazards needs to be traversed, and so on. There’s nothing restricting Mario to the path you create when connecting the levels together.

    The video also features a hand-off of Mario between the two kids. Is this a Player 1 vs Player 2 feature? Is it a co-op game? What is going on?

    This Mario figure also begs the question if other characters will be the same. Will there be a Luigi with animated eyes, mouth, chest and sound effects? Princess Peach? Bowser? Link? The teaser video, while answering some questions, brings up more.

    I had no idea how this theme would be done. I, like probably every other LEGO fan out there, made the assumption that it would take the same approach as any other licensed theme: minifigs of Nintendo characters, sets based on famous locations from games such as Hyrule Castle, Bowser’s Castle, Karts from Mario Kart, minifigs of characters. But that is not what we got. The theme is called LEGO Super Mario so even if we’re restricted to just the platforming Mario games, this is still not what I was expecting. LEGO and Nintendo seems to be trying to recreate the platforming experience using bricks and plates. The paths look something like one of the old LEGO board games adapted for Mario.

    Like I mentioned earlier, the reveal shows multiple sets. There’s no indication how the sets are broken up, what the price points are, or what other sets in the line there are if any. There are a couple of rumored lists out there with set numbers and price points, so there’s still hope that we may see a variety of sets and that what we see in the video isn’t indicative of what the entire line is going to look like.

    My prediction on its reception is that LEGO fans are going to hate it, but non-LEGO Nintendo fans will eat it up. I’m a huge fan and of Nintendo, but my reaction is coming from the LEGO fan inside me. After seeing the video, I get now why Mario looks the way it looks. I don’t exactly hate what’s been shown so far, but I’m not in love with it either. My tempered expectations will remain reserved until more is revealed. So far though? Not a fan but I’d be lying if I said I wasn’t going to buy it.