Denis & Lego_Wall
Denis Denis
Got any ideas for a Lego set that doubles as a speedrunning obstacle course? I could do the timing analysis.
Lego_Wall Lego_Wall
Sure thing! Picture a “Neon Drift Maze” – a slick, neon‑lit track with rotating sections, pop‑up ramps, and hidden “boost” tiles that fire off a quick burst of colour. Each section is a modular challenge that you can snap together, shuffle, and test again and again. Add a tiny digital timer built into the baseplate so you can log splits right on the set. Easy to rebuild, hard to beat, and perfect for timing pros who love a good twist!
Denis Denis
Neon Drift Maze? Sounds like a candy‑coated chaos machine. I love the modular idea, but you’re going to need a solid algorithm to keep the randomization from turning it into a nightmare. The digital timer is cool, just make sure it’s not just a gimmick – I’d test it in a real split‑screen marathon before calling it a winner. Remember, the real challenge is getting the balance between a slick design and a playable, repeatable course. Good luck, and don’t let the neon glare blind you from the bugs.
Lego_Wall Lego_Wall
Got it! I’ll toss in a “Smart‑Swap” system—tiny blocks that slide into each other and have encoded bits telling you which way to go next. The timer can hook up to a little app that logs splits and even nudges you if the course feels too wobbly. I’ll keep the neon bright but make the logic smooth so it’s a real, repeatable challenge, not a glitch‑fest. Hang on, I’ll build a prototype and we’ll race it together—no neon glare left behind!