1377 pieces, reliable software, patience, and a lot of talent are what it takes to make a 1969 Mercedes-Benz 280SL out of LEGO. LEGO Ideas allows users to unleash their creativity and make their work ...
Lego has announced a slew of new automotive-themed sets. As is typical fashion for brand of building toys, the subject matter leans toward ultra-exotic, ultra-expensive vehicles, ranging from a ...
Lego and Daimler are known for collaborating in the past on an Unimog created from Lego pieces, but their latest joint-venture product is the most complicated toy truck you'll ever see. It goes by the ...
LEGO has announced a buildable model of Lewis Hamilton and Valtteri Bottas' Mercedes Formula 1 car, which will be available to buy a few weeks before the new season starts in mid-March. While Lewis ...
One of the most complex Lego Technik models ever devised is about to hit stores, just in time for you to, ahem, test out things you're thinking about giving to family members during the holiday season ...
Mercedes has teamed up with toy giant LEGO to give Formula 1 fans an opportunity to build their very own replica scale model of a Formula 1 car raced by both Lewis Hamilton and Valtteri Bottas. The ...
They say that you never really grow up, your toys just get bigger. If LEGO's latest Technic kit is anything to go by, that old statement is pretty close to the mark. LEGO has teamed up with ...
The fully-functional model Mercedes-Benz Arocs has eight articulating wheels, a functional grabber arm powered by pneumatics, and a rotating turntable for the arm. Fully assembled, the Arocs measures ...
Standing at 12 inches high and 21 inches long, the Arocs 3245 will be one of the most complex models in the Lego Technic assortment. In order to bring this model to fruition, the team at Lego visited ...
Out of a Lego kit, dexterous children and shameless adult (You mean ‘cool,’ right?—Ed.) can snap together Ferrari F40s, Volkswagen camper vans, Mini Coopers, Volvo backhoes and basically anything on ...
I've been a tech journalist for almost 25 years and started Pocket-lint in 2003. Over the years I've questioned or interviewed leading tech industry figures from Steve Jobs, Steve Ballmer, Mark ...