LEGO Dungeons & Dragons: Set Review, Collectable Minifigures Preview, and More
The Battlegorilla LEGO PodcastApril 02, 202400:32:5924.93 MB

LEGO Dungeons & Dragons: Set Review, Collectable Minifigures Preview, and More

Dive into the exciting world of the LEGO and Dungeons & Dragons fusion. Explore the history of both hobbies, from childhood introductions to the highly anticipated collaboration between Wizards of the Coast and the LEGO Group. Get a review of the first-ever LEGO D&D set and a sneak peek at the upcoming collectible minifigures series, all while unraveling the nostalgic journey of discovery and creativity. Don't miss this thrilling episode that celebrates the 50-year milestone of Dungeons & Dragons and the magic of LEGO building.

[00:00:00] This is the Battlegorilla LEGO Podcast Episode 35, LEGO Dungeons & Dragons, Set Review, Collectible

[00:00:07] Many Figures Preview and more.

[00:00:11] The secret title of today's episode is Hobby Fusion, two great tastes that taste great

[00:00:17] together.

[00:00:19] I'm really hoping that this week's secret title isn't too obscure.

[00:00:25] It's supposed to make you imagine two nerds, each with an armload of their hobby of choice

[00:00:30] restricting their view, causing them to run headlong into each other and crash to the ground,

[00:00:36] scattering their individual collections into a one big mixed up pile.

[00:00:42] The first one, exclaiming, Hey, you got your LEGO in my D&D, and the other exclaiming,

[00:00:49] Hey, you got your D&D in my LEGO!

[00:00:53] Before discovering that the two individual hobbies become even better when combined.

[00:01:00] If that doesn't ring a bell for you, well, then I'm dating myself with TV commercial

[00:01:05] references.

[00:01:06] Let's just move on.

[00:01:09] The disclaimer, LEGO is a trademark of the LEGO group of companies which does not sponsor,

[00:01:16] authorize or endorse this podcast.

[00:01:20] Are you ready to listen to the world's number one LEGO podcast recorded in my apartment?

[00:01:51] Welcome to the Battle Gorilla LEGO podcast.

[00:01:56] My name is Mike Sneeden, I'm your host, let's get right into it.

[00:02:00] Mid to late January 1974, the birth of the role-playing game.

[00:02:07] Specifically, the birth of that first role-playing game, Dungeons and Dragons.

[00:02:14] I didn't start playing it when it first hit shelves.

[00:02:18] The game was suggested for H's 12 and up, and at the time I had just turned 3.

[00:02:24] So I was probably a little too young.

[00:02:29] Maybe I could have pulled it off?

[00:02:31] I was a somewhat precocious youngster.

[00:02:34] But looking at the game's 50 year history, I can say that I've been playing often on

[00:02:39] again for 42 of those 50 years.

[00:02:44] Residents of the Coast has teamed up with the LEGO group and on April 4th, 2024 or April

[00:02:51] 1st for those of us in the LEGO Insiders program.

[00:02:55] We will be getting or we'll have gotten the first ever official D&D LEGO set in celebration

[00:03:02] of that 50 year milestone.

[00:03:06] I started playing with LEGO in 1977.

[00:03:09] I started playing Dungeons and Dragons in 1982.

[00:03:13] So there is an extent to which I have been waiting for this first official fusion of LEGO

[00:03:18] and D&D since early childhood.

[00:03:22] If you're a regular listener to this podcast, you already know about my introduction to

[00:03:27] LEGO.

[00:03:29] Since that's already been covered, let me tell you about my introduction to Dungeons and

[00:03:33] Dragons.

[00:03:35] Growing up, I had this cousin who lived just a couple of blocks away from me.

[00:03:42] He was 4 years older and was equal parts relative and nemesis.

[00:03:49] For most of my youth, I looked up to him and tried to get him to like me and that never

[00:03:55] ever worked out well for me.

[00:04:00] When I was about 12 years old, he started talking about this new game that he and his friends

[00:04:04] had been playing, something called Dungeons and Dragons.

[00:04:09] I had a healthy interest in fantasy and sword and sorcery stuff by this point in my life,

[00:04:15] largely as a result of books like Lloyd Alexander's The Chronicles of Pridein series and movies

[00:04:21] like Dragon Slayer.

[00:04:23] So I was very interested in this game my cousin was talking about.

[00:04:28] After hearing about how wonderful the game was and how much fun it is to play, I asked

[00:04:34] if he'd play with me.

[00:04:36] He of course said no.

[00:04:39] I was too young.

[00:04:41] Which was technically a lie as I was 12 and the game stated it was for ages 12 and up,

[00:04:47] but I didn't know all of that at the time.

[00:04:51] I started asking people at school if they'd ever heard of Dungeons and Dragons.

[00:04:56] My best friend Chad had not heard of the game, but like me was very interested in it once

[00:05:02] I started telling him what little I knew about it.

[00:05:06] He was also a fan of The Chronicles of Pridein and Dragons layer, both of which I had introduced

[00:05:11] him to.

[00:05:12] A couple of the people that I talked to had older brothers who played, they knew a little

[00:05:18] bit about it, but not enough to sufficiently answer all of my questions.

[00:05:23] I did discover however that D&D was not what I was envisioning.

[00:05:29] I had pictured it as a colorful game board that folded in half and was stored in a rectangular

[00:05:36] box when not in use, along with whatever little plastic pieces you used to move around

[00:05:40] the board.

[00:05:41] And a pair of traditional cube-shaped dice with dots on each face to indicate a number.

[00:05:48] This was 1982.

[00:05:51] What I just described was what 90 plus percent of games were.

[00:05:57] But not D&D.

[00:05:59] D&D I was told was a stack of hardcover rule books and a handful of weird-looking dice

[00:06:08] with actual numbers on their faces instead of dots.

[00:06:13] There were other things that went with the game, a lot of which were optional and sold separately.

[00:06:19] But at its core, hardcover rule books and weird-looking dice.

[00:06:25] I kept pestering my cousin to let us play.

[00:06:29] By this point it was both Chad and I who wanted in on this.

[00:06:33] I told him that I could probably get mom to buy me whatever rule books I needed.

[00:06:37] He scoffed at this and informed me that real D&D players don't need those rule books.

[00:06:46] That those rule books were just for the people to stupid to figure out how to play the game

[00:06:51] on their own.

[00:06:53] Even back at this situation, I have no idea if my cousin was playing some weird bastardism

[00:07:01] in where their so-called dungeon master just ran with no rules, anything goes style.

[00:07:09] Or if my cousin had simply heard about the game, had no actual involvement with it and

[00:07:16] was using its mere existence to torment me with something I couldn't have.

[00:07:22] Neither of those would really surprise me.

[00:07:26] And then one day, Chad and I were talking about D&D during the lunch period at school when

[00:07:31] our classmate Bob was walking by.

[00:07:35] Bob stopped for a moment, listened to what we were talking about, and said, I played D&D.

[00:07:42] Bob answered all the questions we had, including can we join your group?

[00:07:46] The answer to which was probably not, no.

[00:07:51] My ex-older brother was their group's dungeon master.

[00:07:54] But it didn't take long for us to formulate a new question.

[00:07:59] Could you start a new group in DM for us?

[00:08:03] Bob had to think about that.

[00:08:05] But a couple days later he agreed.

[00:08:08] Now at this point in time, Dungeons and Dragons had two different versions which were not

[00:08:14] compatible with each other – basic D&D and advanced D&D.

[00:08:20] You'd think, with those names, you could start with basic and then move your game on

[00:08:26] into advanced.

[00:08:29] But basic D&D only covered the first three levels of play.

[00:08:33] And if you wanted more, you had to move onto expert D&D, which was the evolution of basic.

[00:08:42] With advanced, you started your characters at level one so you couldn't simply bring

[00:08:47] your third level basic characters over to advance and expect that to work.

[00:08:53] Bob wanted us to start with basic as it was easier to get into, and if it worked for

[00:08:58] us, then we could do an advanced D&D campaign with new characters later on.

[00:09:03] Also, the basic rulebook was paperback and a lot cheaper to get into than advanced.

[00:09:11] Mom bought me a copy of that rulebook along with a starter adventure, the Keep on the

[00:09:15] Borderlands, which I handed off to Bob.

[00:09:20] Basic was a really simplified version of the game, not that we knew that the first time

[00:09:24] we played.

[00:09:26] For instance, basic had three possible alignments – lawful, neutral and chaotic instead

[00:09:33] of the usual nine.

[00:09:35] And the character classes were interesting.

[00:09:41] The included classes were clerics, dwarves, elves, fighters, halflings, magic users,

[00:09:51] and thieves.

[00:09:53] Yes, dwarves, elves, and halflings counted as classes in the game, not races.

[00:10:01] It was just assumed that their racial stereotypes were simply class abilities.

[00:10:07] All clerics, fighters, magic users, and thieves were human.

[00:10:12] It said so right there in the rules.

[00:10:16] The Keep on the Borderland had a strange setup which required extra work on the DMs part

[00:10:22] to prepare for play.

[00:10:24] Bob's prep work didn't seem to be going fast enough for Chad and I, and I can remember

[00:10:31] us mostly good, naturally, verbally berating him about data recess.

[00:10:37] Finally, after what seemed like far too long to a couple of really impatient 12-year-olds,

[00:10:44] we had our first session.

[00:10:47] My character survived those first few hours of gameplay.

[00:10:51] Chad's character was killed in battle.

[00:10:54] We did eventually move from basic to advanced.

[00:10:58] One years later, from advanced Dungeons and Dragons to advanced Dungeons and Dragons

[00:11:04] second edition when they published that revised set of rules.

[00:11:09] The current version of the game is fifth edition, but it's also now 50 years old as previously

[00:11:15] mentioned.

[00:11:17] In October of 2022, LEGO Ideas announced a contest to design a set to celebrate the 50th anniversary

[00:11:26] of Dungeons and Dragons.

[00:11:29] The contest ran for a little over a month then eventually went to a public vote.

[00:11:35] On January 5th, 2023, the winner was announced.

[00:11:39] An A-Full named Lucas Bolt, whose nom de bricke his Bolt builds had submitted an entry

[00:11:45] entitled Dragon's Keep, Journeys End, which would become the official 50th anniversary

[00:11:51] Dungeons and Dragons LEGO set.

[00:11:54] It nearly a year and a half after the initial announcement of the contest, on March 19th

[00:11:59] of this year, LEGO officially unveiled the set.

[00:12:03] It would be an 18-plus set in the LEGO Ideas line.

[00:12:08] Set number 21348, 3,745 pieces, six mini figures, and a price tag of $359.99.

[00:12:22] It's commonly accepted that a good price for a new LEGO set is $0.10 per part.

[00:12:28] It's also generally accepted that there will be what's referred to as the IP tax on licensed

[00:12:34] sets.

[00:12:36] Brickner.com did an analysis of the IP tax several months ago, and it apparently tends

[00:12:42] to be about a 20% markup.

[00:12:46] The Dungeons and Dragons set would count as a license to property.

[00:12:50] And at 3,745 pieces for $359.99 you'll be paying just $0.6 per piece.

[00:13:02] So the price is actually low for what you'll be getting.

[00:13:08] Before I get into the details about the set itself, it is important to note that it isn't

[00:13:13] just a LEGO set.

[00:13:15] It's not just a display piece.

[00:13:17] This set is an actual playable Dungeons and Dragons adventure.

[00:13:22] You can download the free 20-page PDF from LEGO Insiders, or spend 2700 Insiders points

[00:13:30] and get the exclusive paperback edition of the adventure while supplies last.

[00:13:35] You can also get the adventure through the D&D Beyond app.

[00:13:39] I'd originally planned to talk about it being a playable adventure later on in the podcast,

[00:13:46] but then I realized that describing this set would count as spoilers for the adventure,

[00:13:52] possibly only minor spoilers, but still.

[00:13:56] So if you're interested in having your Dungeon Master run this adventure and you don't

[00:14:00] want to be spoiled, then stop this episode here.

[00:14:04] Be sure and catch next week's episode until all your friends about this podcast,

[00:14:07] but stop this episode here.

[00:14:10] Spoilers begin now.

[00:14:14] Once built, this set is 19 inches tall, 15 inches wide, and 12 inches deep, and consists

[00:14:21] of a modular construction that is made up of five sections called the meadow, the inn

[00:14:30] which is named Inplane Site, the tower, the basement.

[00:14:37] And the dungeon.

[00:14:40] And it looks like there's at least some kind of adventure in every section, monsters to fight,

[00:14:46] traps to avoid, treasure to find.

[00:14:51] Then there are the mini figures, players, adventurers.

[00:14:57] You have an orc rogue, gnome fighter, elf wizard, dwarf cleric and dragonborn bard.

[00:15:07] And a sixth figure that they don't mention outside of indicating that there is a sixth

[00:15:13] figure.

[00:15:15] In some of the promotional images, he looks like he might be a human inkeeper, but they

[00:15:22] don't actually refer to him as an inkeeper.

[00:15:26] So villain?

[00:15:29] I'm assuming villain.

[00:15:32] In this set, Lego went all out in terms of representation and customization.

[00:15:39] For five of the six adventurers, you get to choose their gender.

[00:15:43] How?

[00:15:45] That's actually a good question.

[00:15:47] I've heard two competing reports about that from people doing early set reviews.

[00:15:52] One is that Lego's traditional use of the two faces on one head, which is usually along the lines

[00:15:59] of happy face and sad face or surprised face and angry face, etc.

[00:16:06] Is in this set male on one side female on the other with a different hairpiece and beard included

[00:16:15] for the dwarf.

[00:16:17] But I've also heard reports that these five mini figures simply come with an additional head,

[00:16:23] giving builders a male head and a female head to choose from.

[00:16:28] Either way, I think this is a fantastic idea.

[00:16:32] The only character to not have dual gender auctions is the dragonborn character.

[00:16:38] Dragonborn, for those of you unfamiliar with D&D,

[00:16:41] is basically like an anthropomorphic dragon by pedal, by manus, shaped like a humanoid,

[00:16:48] but scaly and with a more dragonlike head.

[00:16:52] But I looked at a picture of that figure,

[00:16:55] and I honestly wouldn't be able to tell you what gender it was.

[00:16:59] Is it male?

[00:17:00] Is it female?

[00:17:02] I suppose it's whichever one you want.

[00:17:06] The heads of the other five mini figures are all different colors,

[00:17:10] a variety of skin tones.

[00:17:12] And this is where the other impressive bit of customization comes in.

[00:17:16] Everybody is wearing gloves and long pants.

[00:17:21] There isn't exposed skin on any of these characters,

[00:17:26] meaning that you can switch the races and classes around just by swapping their heads

[00:17:32] and hair or head gear.

[00:17:35] You want the orb to be the wizard instead of the rogue?

[00:17:38] Put the orcs head on the wizard's body.

[00:17:41] Think that the elf would make a better bard than the dragonborn?

[00:17:45] Again, just swap out the heads.

[00:17:47] The bodies also lack any gender-specific shaping in their designs.

[00:17:53] So every represented class can be any of the represented race and gender combinations.

[00:18:01] There are also some monsters in the set for the mini figures to fight.

[00:18:06] Classic the indie opponents like the Beholder, Owl Bear, Mimic,

[00:18:12] and Displace Rebeast are brick-built constructs.

[00:18:16] Plus, of course, the Red Dragon Cinder Howl with Fabric Wings.

[00:18:22] Others like the trio of skeletons and the Micah Niduou are more mini figure-like?

[00:18:31] The skeletons have weapons and armor so that if you can defeat them during gameplay,

[00:18:37] then afterwards you can loot the bodies because it isn't really a proper Dungeons and Dragons game

[00:18:44] if there aren't bodies to loot at some point. I will most likely not be picking up this set for myself.

[00:18:51] Oh, I'd really like to have it! But not having any money makes some of these new Lego

[00:18:56] set releases very, very sad for me. This is Episode 35 of the podcast though.

[00:19:04] Maybe one of my listeners will buy it for me as a congratulations on reaching 35 episodes gift.

[00:19:10] You never know. From April 1st through 7th, wild supplies last,

[00:19:17] there is a free gift with purchase that comes with the Lego D&D set.

[00:19:22] This gift with purchase is a 160-piece buildable chest, like a treasure chest,

[00:19:29] a perfectly ordinary treasure chest. Not dangerous at all. Go ahead, open it. It's safe,

[00:19:40] okay, I tell a lie. It's actually a mimic. Multiple eyes, lots of sharp teeth, big blue tongue.

[00:19:53] But if you decide to risk it, there's enough room inside the thing to store a set of gaming dice.

[00:20:00] I mean, I certainly wouldn't risk it but that is what the set was designed as.

[00:20:06] But the D&D set isn't the only bit of 50th anniversary-ness that wizards of the coast and

[00:20:12] the Lego group have in store for us. Because September 1st sees the release of the first,

[00:20:19] and I'm calling it the first in the hopes that there will be others,

[00:20:23] series of Dungeons & Dragons collectible mini figures.

[00:20:27] 12 blind boxed figures, 499 apiece as per usual. The lineup for this wave of figures

[00:20:35] is as follows. Dragonborn Paladin, carries a shield and a mace, new mold for the armor and the

[00:20:42] mace head. Erika Kukra Ranger. The Erika Kukra are a race of anthropomorphic bird folk,

[00:20:51] complete with wings granting them the ability to fly. This figure will use the fawn legs and

[00:20:56] will have new molds for its head and for its wings. Armed with a bow and accompanied by a small dog.

[00:21:03] Being a giant bird, I kind of wonder if that dog is his lunch.

[00:21:12] The next 5 figures on the list all have chooseable gender like the figures from the D&D set.

[00:21:18] Still no idea if the inclusion of both genders is going to be one double-sided head or just two

[00:21:23] different heads. Teflings Sorcerer. Teflings are humanoids, most often depicted as human but

[00:21:30] sometimes dwarf, elf, gnome, orc or whatever. That have some demon blood in them and that shows

[00:21:39] in their physical appearance. This figure has a new molded hair piece with horns along with

[00:21:46] a set of transpink claws and also comes with a red baby dragon. Dwarf barbarian comes with a new

[00:21:55] molded axe and torch. Halfling druid, this would be Hobbit druid if not for a copyright lawsuit

[00:22:04] filed by a game company that held the lord of the ring's license back in the late 70s.

[00:22:10] This one wears a fancy cape with antlered hood, new mold for that, carries a staff and has a bird.

[00:22:18] Half elf bard has a new hair mold, wears a scarf, has a sword and a loot.

[00:22:27] The first of the obvious villains in the set is a githyanki warlock. I'm classifying him villain

[00:22:35] because githyanki are all typically lawful evil in alignment. This figure comes with an eyeball

[00:22:42] staff and a new knife piece. And they're the last on this list with the multi-gender option.

[00:22:50] There's a mind flair who has a new head mold because it's very tentically in the lower half of

[00:22:57] its face. It's by no means a perfect match but if I really needed an ood for a doctor humach,

[00:23:06] I suspect I could use the mind flair head. Mind flair comes with an intellect of our

[00:23:12] which is depicted here as a pudgy little brain on four legs and I want a bunch of these little guys,

[00:23:18] they are adorable. The last four figures on my list are all individual named characters from the

[00:23:26] game. Strod von Zaravic, Zaravic, Jankovic, weird strod Jankovic. No let's just call him Count Strod.

[00:23:41] Count Strod's figure is wearing a cape he has a sword and goblet and is accompanied by a rat.

[00:23:47] This is the primary villain of the Ravenloft campaign setting, vampire, necromancer and ruler of

[00:23:56] Barovia. The Lady of Pain with fancy cape and a new molded hair piece. Her accessory is

[00:24:05] a printed cube. She is the enigmatic ruler of the floating city of sigil in the forgotten realms,

[00:24:13] a place with portals to every plane of existence as well as multiple locations within the prime

[00:24:20] material plane. The Zastam wearing a dark red cape with a translucent red skull and an energy blast

[00:24:29] for accessories, powerful lich and necromancer, commander of a huge army of the undead and leader

[00:24:37] of the country of fey. And finally, Tasha the Witch Queen who comes with a book and cauldron

[00:24:47] and uses the hair and witch hat combo from the Hocus Pocus set. A powerful arch made raised by

[00:24:54] Baba Jaga, the mother of witches. Some of her aliases are figures of legend and some of the spells she

[00:25:02] wrote are used by adventurers everywhere. And that's everything we currently know about the product

[00:25:10] releases from this wizards of the coast Lego group collaboration for the Dungeons and Dragons 50th

[00:25:16] anniversary. On April 6, there will be a special presentation on the Dungeons and Dragons YouTube

[00:25:23] and Twitch channels. And at lego.com slash dnd, that's the nd not d ampersand d

[00:25:32] a recording of a special game night held at the lego house where dungeon master and july bimani

[00:25:39] ran the dungeons keep journeys and adventure for players Lewis Carazo, jini d and dnd lego

[00:25:48] fan designer lucas bolt and lego designer jordan scott who was on the team that refined the set for

[00:25:54] production. Hopefully, I pronounced all those names correctly. There's nothing that says this is

[00:26:02] anything other than a one-shot product. Well, two-shot counting the cmf series. Is it possible

[00:26:09] that there will be more lego dnd further down the line? Sure. But we've thought that about other

[00:26:15] projects and that's been very hit or miss for us. Lego picked up the license for dr. who once

[00:26:23] and assigned from a couple of entries in the lego dimensions video game, they produced a grand

[00:26:28] total of one set. Everyone was certain that was just the beginning of lego doctor who but no

[00:26:38] although with the bbc's recent partnership with disney plus on dr. who going forward

[00:26:44] and disney's friendly relationship with lego, it wouldn't surprise me if we got a new lego doctor who

[00:26:50] theme focusing on chudy got was 15th dr. you never know the optimist prime set from a couple of

[00:26:59] years ago seemed an impossibility made real given that transformers is a hasbro property and lego

[00:27:07] is one of their competitors a real once in a lifetime event. But now all the rumors are telling us

[00:27:14] that optimist is going to be joined in lego form this summer by his transformers ally bumblebee.

[00:27:22] Really, the only people who can predict what lego is going to do are the people at lego.

[00:27:28] But anyway, to me more lego dnd would certainly be welcome.

[00:27:33] One of the lego designers of the final version of the set has said that he'd like it if lego would do

[00:27:39] more dnd sets at more affordable price points in the future. But I imagine that will depend on how well

[00:27:46] this first set sells. From a non official standpoint, I'd also like to see some more dungeons and

[00:27:54] dragon style mocks happen. At last year's brick con there was a massive dnd collaborative build built

[00:28:02] along the same lines as the bricks cascade dream bunkers colab 16 stud by 16 stud by 13 brick high

[00:28:09] modules just absolutely filled with dnd style craziness. A couple of years ago Kyle Smith,

[00:28:20] official friend of the podcast and I were talking about the potential for a dnd colab where you'd

[00:28:26] create a build standard and then the various collaborators would build a room with a connecting corridor

[00:28:34] with monsters and or traps and or treasures etc. Everything would link up to create a massive

[00:28:42] dungeon floor plan. Then during the public days we'd bring in a handful of experienced dnd players

[00:28:51] and someone to dm the whole thing and play the game for the public to watch. There were of course

[00:28:59] far too many logistic problems for us to suggest this to people but it was a fun idea to toss

[00:29:04] around for a couple of days. If you're interested in listening to another episode where I discuss dnd

[00:29:11] and other role-playing games check out my November 7th 2023 episode entitled Level Up Your RPG

[00:29:19] How Lego Enhances Tabletop Adventures. A couple of episodes ago I announced the first Lego

[00:29:27] High-Coo Challenge. A Lego High-Coo is of course my little contribution to Lego build criteria.

[00:29:35] It is defined as a complete mock in three sections, usually lined up in a row where the first

[00:29:42] section is made of exactly five pieces. The middle section is made of exactly seven pieces and

[00:29:48] the final section is once again made of five pieces just like the syllable count in the Japanese

[00:29:54] poetry style that bears its name. I posted a photo of two thirds of a High-Coo and challenged you to

[00:30:01] build your version of the missing piece. The photo was of a five piece Federation Starship

[00:30:08] and a five piece Klingon Bird of Prey. Nobody played along or if they did,

[00:30:16] Instagram, Twitter and Blue Sky neglected to show me those entries when I did my searches for

[00:30:22] hashtag Lego High-Coo Challenge. Oh well these things are sometimes slow to catch on.

[00:30:29] Maybe this one will go better. Lego High-Coo Challenge number two.

[00:30:37] Assuming that all went well I posted two photos to Instagram last night. One of those was the

[00:30:44] official finished version of the first challenge. The seven piece segment that was missing from

[00:30:50] that picture was a Borg Cube. The second photo was the new challenge. This time all I'm showing you

[00:31:00] is the seven piece middle section and I'm asking you to build the five piece sections that belong on

[00:31:06] either side of it. The seven piece section in question is a black rectangular frame with six red

[00:31:14] tentacles rising up out of it and go. Post pictures of your solution to either Instagram, Twitter

[00:31:22] or Blue Sky using the hashtag Lego High-Coo Challenge. I'll post the entire version of my High-Coo

[00:31:29] in two weeks assuming nothing goes wrong. Okay be here next week when I'll be talking about

[00:31:37] the 1980s in general and 1985 specifically. It'll be fun! Links to the podcast's social media pages

[00:31:46] and wish lists can be found at battlegurilla.com slash links. If you enjoyed this podcast episode

[00:31:53] tell all your friends about it and if you hated it then definitely recommend it to your enemies

[00:31:59] and remember a $359.99 Lego set is the traditional gift to give a podcaster upon reaching their 35th episode.

[00:32:10] Really it is trust me! The podcast's intro and outro themes podcasting is awesome inspired by

[00:32:19] Teigen and Sarah's Everything is Awesome. An ode to gibberish were created by Michael Rankich.

[00:32:29] I think I just closed Pandora's box and I don't know if you could punch a sucker. How else would

[00:32:36] you know that I've done everything except any of it? You can have your bald eagle afraid of fire and

[00:32:44] you can eat it too and there could be so much joy in my love. How else I mean me? Wish me luck,

[00:32:53] goodness! Prayers for junk food!