This is crazy stuff. When I was a kid we just had Legos of a few different shapes. You'd build something until you ran out of blocks, then take it apart and build something else.
As kids our Dutch neighbours had lego sent in from o/s as you couldn’t buy it in the shops. The rest of us were Meccano kids (NZ, late 60’s). Now I have friends and clients who have entire rooms dedicated to the stuff. Those Imperial battle cruisers are Big!
Pianos seem to be a popular resting spot for X-wing fighters too for some odd reason. Go figure
I had an Erector set. It was awesome.
+1, mine came in the metal box (probably lead painted)- lots of razor sharp edges and required using tools, choking hazards galore….ahhh, they don’t make them like they used to.
In 1979, my father bought us a new console color TV and our first VCR (top loader Panasonic- I think my mother still had it until the early 00’s and it still worked when she finally gave it away). He spent all day setting it up and was so pissed that my little brother and I spent the next week+ playing with the box the TV came in (for those not old enough to know, those TV’s were furniture)- we didn’t even turn it on. The box finally fell apart after cutting so many holes in it for window and gun turrets, saturated in crayon and paint….it became pulp.
Sorry for the drift- just had a moment.
I had erector sets and Legos, so I guess I had the best of both worlds.
In 1979, my father bought us a new console color TV and our first VCR (top loader Panasonic- I think my mother still had it until the early 00’s and it still worked when she finally gave it away). He spent all day setting it up and was so pissed that my little brother and I spent the next week+ playing with the box the TV came in (for those not old enough to know, those TV’s were furniture)- we didn’t even turn it on. The box finally fell apart after cutting so many holes in it for window and gun turrets, saturated in crayon and paint….it became pulp.
Sorry for the drift- just had a moment.
Erector set, Legos, and Lincoln Logs. What more could a kid want?