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LEGO City People Pack – Outdoor Adventures

A fun and very useful new set that was released at the beginning of the month is the #60202 LEGO City People Pack – Outdoor Adventures. This is the third such pack LEGO released so far, after the #60134 LEGO City People Pack – Fun in the Park, and the #60153 LEGO City People Pack – Fun at the Beach. Each set includes a large number of LEGO City minifigures and some excellent accessories. Let’s recap what we got in the previous sets, and also take a look at the newest addition. 🙂

The #60134 LEGO City People Pack – Fun in the Park released in 2016 includes 14 minifigs, plus a baby and a dog. The minifigs in these people packs aren’t just thrown together from random leftover pieces that LEGO wanted to get rid of. Many of the minifigs have unique printings that first appeared in these sets, including very nice torso prints, facial expressions, hairpieces, and hair colors. In addition, there are a number of useful accessories and small builds. For example, the wheelchair in this set was a newly introduced piece at the time of release. The baby carriage, hotdog cart, and lawnmower are all great little builds, and the bus stop sign is a printed element. The set was so well received that it paved the way to the other people packs in the following years.

In 2017, we got the equally popular #60153 LEGO City People Pack – Fun at the Beach. This set includes 15 minifigures, plus a dog, a dolphin, a parrot, a lobster, and a fish. Here, again, the minifig designs are vey nice and even unique to the set. And, we get a number of useful accessories like a kayak, a windsurfing board, radio, metal detector, and more.

This year we got the third set in the series, the #60202 LEGO City People Pack – Outdoor Adventures. This set includes 14 minifigures, plus a baby and an eagle. Many of the torso prints are exclusive to this set with some really great designs.

The bald eagle, the baby carriage, the orange safety vests, and the lime-green bike are all brand new moulds. The color of the baby, the 1×1 round tile with cooked egg print, the 1×4 printed road signs, the coloring of the tent, and the color of the baby’s body are all brand new as well. The 2×2 round printed tile with the log print is not a new piece, but still very useful. In the video-review below, JANGBRiCKS will show you each of the figures and accessories in more detail.

All three of the LEGO City People Packs are excellent sets – perfect for populating a LEGO City with a nice variety of well-designed minifigures. I own all three of the sets released so far and am very happy with them. While the first set released two years ago is no longer available directly from LEGO, the #60153 LEGO City People Pack – Fun at the Beach from last year, and the newly released #60202 LEGO City People Pack – Outdoor Adventures are both available at the LEGO City section of the Online LEGO Shop.

What do you think? How do you like the LEGO City People Packs? Do you have any of them or even all of them already? What other minifig packs would you like to see in the series? Feel free to share your thoughts and own reviews in the comment section below! 😉

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LEGO and IKEA Collaboration Coming!

I haven’t had room to fit this news in last week when it was originally announced, but as it could have interesting implications for LEGO fans, I still wanted to make sure we have a chance to discuss. Last week, LEGO announced that they are collaborating with IKEA, to enable more play and creativity. Below is the full press release.

We know that play is an important part of life and we believe in the power of play. Play lets us be creative, explore, experiment, dream and discover. IKEA and the LEGO Group, join forces to encourage more play.

Play is key to develop. And it is an essential part of a better everyday life. Play is so many different things, for so many different people. In the everyday life there are different barriers for play. Some of the barriers are more evident for grown-ups. One being that grown-ups think that playing can be messy. Other barriers are more evident to children – like grown-ups trying to create order in the play environment, where children in fact enjoy and often immerse themselves in the midst of it all.

“It started with an invitation from the LEGO Group ‘Do you want to play?’. Of course we said yes to this and together we now want to enable more play by triggering play in the functionality of the everyday life. At IKEA we first and foremost want to resolve this built in or maybe just perceived conflict that play is messy in a creative, humanistic and playful way. Because we believe more play makes the home and the world a better place”, says Fredrika Inger, Business Area Manager for Children’s IKEA, at IKEA of Sweden.

In the IKEA Play Report, IKEA asked children what they want and 47% of them said that they want more playtime with their parents. At the same time 90% of the asked parents believe play is essential to wellbeing and happiness, building on to the belief that play is important. In an upcoming study on play made by the LEGO Group, 95% of parents responded that play is fundamental to their child’s development and that playing with LEGO bricks helps their children to be creative. Then why don’t we play more? The collaboration aims to increase the opportunity for playing more. First out is to try to make the whole home a better functioning and more fun place.

“In the LEGO Group our mission has always been to inspire and develop children through play, and there’s an exciting and fun challenge in finding a solution that can encourage more creative LEGO play while at the same time pleasing parent’s interest in household look and feel to enable children and their parents to play together. We know that creativity is a critical skill needed for the future, but we also know that tinkering, experimenting, being creative and trying out new things can be messy. In our collaboration with IKEA we therefore wish to deal with the challenge that some parents might have with the – wonderful – mess that play creates”, says Lena Dixen, Senior Vice President, Product Development at the LEGO Group.

“Bringing people together over play and enable more play are things that are key for both us and the LEGO Group based on our respective visions, missions and values. That is why we want to explore what can happen when we work together, trying to get more of the many people to say yes to play”, says Fredrika Inger, Business Area Manager for Children’s IKEA, at IKEA of Sweden. In the next couple of years the first outcome of the collaboration will reach customers in IKEA stores.

As you can see, the press-release does not specify what kind of products we can expect from this collaboration between LEGO and IKEA, but my guess would be play-tables, and storage, organization and display solutions for LEGO and other toys. If done right, this could be a very welcome development to LEGO fans of all ages. IKEA products are already very popular with LEGO fans, especially their modular shelving systems and storage solutions.

What do you think? How do you like the idea of LEGO and IKEA collaborating? What kind of products do you think they will make? And what would you like to see them make? Feel free to share your thoughts and ideas in the comment section below!

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