Medieval Fantasy meets LEGO Again
An anonymous reader writes "At over two years in the making, The Kingdom of Ikros provides viewers with a 40-chapter novel, graphically illustrated entirely by LEGO models and Photoshop effects. Apparently the author isn't stopping there, either, a link off the main page takes you to another website which will host the sequel. The Kingdom of Ikros website also contains a pair of flash movies and pictures of the models used in the story, as well as biographies of the characters involved."
I am proud to annouce that these guys have won this week's "Too Much Time On Your Hands" award.
If they really come through on a sequel, I may just rename the award after them.
~Philly
Here: The Brick Testament
"Would it kill you to put down the toilet seat?" -- Maya Angelou
I wonder if anybody ever considered using lego's in school. Back as a child, I remember having time to play with various toys in school, but how about recreating battles or something to try and teach children. They remember the names and tatics used in children TV Shows, but nobody ever takes the time to teach real history. Your kids will come home and set up their legos and gi joes and you'll ask them what they're playing and they'll start telling you how their playing Cival War or something...
Either way, it couldn't hurt... to them it'll still be a game.
"When will this FP stuff stop?" "After the great growing..." "The great growing?" "Yea, when people grow up."
THIS
At over two years in the making, The Kingdom of Ikros provides viewers with a 40-chapter novel, graphically illustrated entirely by LEGO models and Photoshop effects.
;-)
The guy's definitely an unemployed ex-DotCom'er
Reply or e-mail; don't vaguely moderate. Ex-O'Reilly/MIT employee, now a full-time Google employee.
I bet they do this to impress the ladies.
>Medieval Fantasy meets LEGO Again
Medieval Fanatic fails to impress girls with LEGOs. Again.
This reminds me a bit of the Barbi issues brought up by Mattel. Mattel didn't appreciate the ways in which Barbi was being (mis)used in certain situations and successfully sued to have it stopped. Is there any potential for copyright violation here since the author is including the legos in a published work? I know legos has had a generally positive outlook on users hacking their products so it's probable that Legos wouldn't sue, but is it potentially within thir rights?