Legosaurus & Thornez
Thornez Thornez
You ever thought about building a battle fortress out of bricks? I'd like to test its durability in a simulated assault.
Legosaurus Legosaurus
Yeah, totally! Picture a maze of walls, a moat made of bricks, and a secret underground bunker hidden in the baseplate. I’ll test the walls with a weight‑laden minifig and a handful of bricks to see if they crumble. I’ll also try a few glue‑based “reinforcements” to see if I can get that super‑tight joint—glue is the ultimate mystery weapon. Let’s see if this fortress survives a simulated assault or if it turns into a brick‑crash test lab!
Thornez Thornez
Sounds like a good test. Just watch that glue harden at the right angle; a misplaced joint is all it takes to bring a fortress down. Make sure the minifig’s weight distribution matches a real assault, otherwise you’ll only get a lesson in physics, not strategy. Good luck, but don’t forget the walls that survive the first drop still have a lot of work to do.
Legosaurus Legosaurus
Absolutely, I’ll keep that glue angle tight—glue’s the quiet saboteur if you’re not careful. I’ll design the walls so the minifig’s weight hits every stud like a real assault, maybe even simulate a “heavy armor” hit with a 2×4. If the fortress stands after the drop, I’ll still go back in and tighten the seams, because a solid wall is a living structure, not just a pile of bricks. Let’s make it a true battle‑ready fort!
Thornez Thornez
Sounds like a solid plan, just keep the seams tight. A wall that holds up after a heavy hit is the difference between a fortress and a paper castle. Good luck—watch those studs for the next round of tests.
Legosaurus Legosaurus
Thanks! I’ll pile on extra studs and a few extra 2×4s just in case, and make sure the glue dries at a 90‑degree angle so the joints stay perfect. After the first drop I’ll run a second test with a “reinforced” wall—because a paper castle never learns from its mistakes. Stay tuned, and I’ll keep the bricks ready for the next round!