Shopping at LEGO or Amazon?
Please use our links:
LEGO.com • Amazon
As an Amazon Associate we earn from qualifying purchases.
21118 - D2C Minecraft Village Coming this August
Just2Good's found sources and tidbits of leaked info towards this set
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a1UqT9gB4zQNot much is know about it yet, but the Set will retail for $200 USD in the second half of the year, and include a new villager mob. Given this anyone planning on getting it should really be making room for a Minecraft corner, because this set'll probably take up
a lot of space.
Thoughts?
1
Shopping at LEGO.com or Amazon?
Please use our links: LEGO.com • Amazon
Recent discussions •
Categories •
Privacy Policy •
Brickset.com
Howdy, Stranger!
It looks like you're new here. Sign in or register to get started.
Quick Links
Brickset.com is a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, the Amazon.com.ca, Inc. Associates Program and the Amazon EU Associates Programme, which are affiliate advertising programs designed to provide a means for sites to earn advertising fees by advertising and linking to Amazon.
As an Amazon Associate we earn from qualifying purchases.
Comments
http://www.eurobricks.com/forum/index.php?showtopic=113085&st=75#entry2451609
I have only had time to do a basic setup for now, but plan to create something more unique soon, as I have been adding more basic terrain bricks and plates to my collection.
This is just a relatively simple arrangement:
I am very much looking forward to all the 2016 sets, but especially The Fortress and The Village.
I agree that they're not great from a building-technique perspective, but that's not the point. What they are great for is building great scenes, based on the Minecraft theme and I love them for that. I like how they look.
I get my building-technique kicks from Modulars and other more complex sets.
I keep going back to a simple point though: They must be selling well for TLG to continue to produce them and to now produce a D2C, so people are enjoying them, which is the whole point. There are plenty of other D2Cs being released this year that will be of more interest to AFOLs, so enjoy those and let those who will enjoy this one do so, without it being complained about.
Were you planning to buy all the D2Cs currently announced? If not, well, this is just another one that you don't have to buy:
All IMVHO. :-)
It's a D2C set.
Either this thing is going to be absolutely massive in size due it being made out of basic bricks (in order to justify the price, of course,) or there's something truly unique about this set that may just blow us away.
For all we know, all of the pieces might be printed with the pixel designs on the side, which, although I don't very much care for, will make those that love Minecraft (as well as the sets) clamor for it.
The minifig mob count would also need to be extremely generous for me to even remotely consider it.
As for mobs, we need a nice range of villagers, chickens, rabbits and perhaps another horse (to go with the one in The Fortress). There's no need for an Iron Golem, of course. As I said before, I'd prefer not to have too many (any) skeletons, zombies, creepers, Steves or Alexes, as we already have loads of those from the other sets, but realistically, there are likely to be some.
I'm certainly looking forward to finding out though, whatever it is! :-)
"According to The NPD Group, LEGO Star Wars™, LEGO City, LEGO Friends, LEGO Super Heroes and LEGO Minecraft ranked among the top five LEGO properties of the year in the U.S. market".
http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/lego-systems-records-eleventh-consecutive-year-of-growth-in-us-toy-market-300218844.html
Perhaps that can put the sniping to bed? ;-)
Now officially confirmed!
So Lego's going with neither...
Very disappointing.
I mean, sure it's cool as it's as accurate as it will get, but its $200! There's only 1600 pieces (exactly) in the set. I know that this there is "license tax" to consider here, but this is ridiculous.
Now I know that there will be some parents who will fork over this kind of cash, either now, or for their child's birthday or Christmas, but outside of these willing parents, and adult Minecraft fans (who are a seriously small minority), how in the world does Lego expect this thing to sell?
I mean it's a part of one of Lego's most profitable themes, if their results for 2015 were anything to go by, but how far will that go? There's a good chance that a majority of those sales were on smaller sets kids could afford on their own.
but only ok.
if i was in to mindcraft lego then this would be a must buy.
but i am not.
it is however priced right ware i was expecting it to be.
only with about 50 or so less parts. as i was expecting to see about 1650.
i do see this selling a Hell of a lot better then batcave and the Hoth set.
but not as well a GBHQ.
we will see what my interest are at the start of 2017. who knows. maybe the mindcraft theme will have grown on me.
or maybe i will be buying Mindcraft from lack of other stuff to buy.
who knows. i dont hate the mindcraft theme. but i not in love with it.
it one of them themes. if some one give me a minecraft set, as a gift. i would be happy with it. i would build it and display it.
unlike if some one was to give me a Pirates theme set. unless it was a boat. it would go right in to my spare parts box.
@drdavewatford and @CapnRex101, please merge this thread with this one :
http://bricksetforum.com/discussion/23263/minecraft-d2c-the-village
In the meantime, I'll post some more pics tonight of my previous build, which is missing all the new sets (The Iron Golem, The Wither, The Jungle TreeHouse and The End Portal).
having said that, there are some pics higher up in this thread already. It's not very impressive... ;-)
I'm going to have to hit BL for a ton more LBG bricks and extra plates, for landscaping!
^^ That's a lot of text...
I have some points I'd like raise in reply, in easy-to-digest bullet-point form:
- Not every set will be to every consumer's taste. Beauty is in the eye of the beholder.
- We do not know exactly what Lego's definition of a D2C is, in terms of subject matter, price, piece count, mission statement etc.
- Minecraft is a very different style to other Lego themes.
- We do not have access to Lego Minecraft sales figures, customer feedback and market research.
- Some adults like playsets.
- Some parents will pay for this product.
I took that statement little harsh, they should be able to provide many different experiences for these D2C that retail sets wouldn't and can't due to the many constraints involved for the regular sets.
I expected a little more detail and a slightly different visual language that fits with the existing theme whilst being a flagship piece from the entire line much like other themes. As mentioned above the Minecraft theme is quite different and unique unlike many other LEGO themes so that may not have been possible without being a departure from the current line which may be a miss for it's large fan base.
I shouldn't jump to assumptions nor do we have information on the consumer feedback and sales. However the fact that the theme essentially started with a single set which spun into those three other Micro Worlds and several Minifigure-Scale waves with the addition of this upcoming D2C for Minecraft set; it's clear that there is a huge number of admirers and fans of the 'LEGO Minecraft' theme.
At the end of the day not every product wiIl appeal to every individual; in this case that will be me.
We don't know specific LEGO Minecraft sales figures, but we do know that according to NPD Tracking Service data (which covers around 80% of the U.S. toy retail market), it was one of the top five best-selling LEGO themes in the United States last year (source). So I think it's fair to say the theme has a large audience. Understandably so, since Minecraft is a wildly popular game with kids and adults alike.
The top 5 bestselling themes in 2015 were:
The top five bestselling sets in 2015 were, in order:
Source: http://brickset.com/article/19609/lego-group-annual-report-sales-growth-of-19-in-2015
Also interesting: http://www.brickpicker.com/bpms/topsellinglegosets.cfm
^^ it doesn't even list any minecraft!
As a side note, I read an article yesterday claiming that 10,000 copies of the actual Minecraft game are sold PER DAY, and that the average age of players is 28–29 years old. Those statistics make the popularity of the theme and the potential marketability of a huge D2C set make a bit more sense.
Although I will agree that playsets can be marketed towards adults, this set is at a price point that only adults can afford.
I think that if this set was just $20 cheaper, it would appear as a better value. I mean most modular buildings never break the $160 tag yet have almost 500 more pieces than this new set!
But considering the US is roughly just as big as europe and asia is know for being a massive gaming continent, I would have thought it would be mentioned.
As for the average age of a minecraft gamer being 28-29 ... hahahaha!
I also never give my actual date of birth in any form, so I would not believe that in the slightest.
Just to re-iterate: I know the game is played by a lot of people, but the majority I think will be under the age of 18. I also believe there is a large market for the sets, just more likely in the under-age age group.
I just love "Open World" games, such as the Elder Scrolls games (Oblivion, Skyrim etc.), Far Cry, Minecraft... :-)
So Minecraft is definitely not limited to kids. (at least if you go by number-of-trips-around-the-sun :-)
I don't have any hard data to back this up, but anecdotal evidence indicates programmers as a species tend to be drawn to Minecraft, so it may have pockets of appeal to adults who fall into that category.