Hapori Tohu Posted June 28, 2016 Share Posted June 28, 2016 The LEGO Group has posted two images on their Facebook page showing one of the brick sculptures they will be exhibiting at San Diego Comic-Con 2016 (July 21 to 24). It's a 51-inch, 64,148-piece sculpture of Jay, the Ninja of Lightning from LEGO Ninjago: Masters of Spinjitzu! The Jay sculpture wears his new costume from the summer 2016 LEGO Ninjago sets, carries an electrified pair of nunchaku, and took 345 hours to build. Follow the link above to see the pictures! View the full article Quote News Forums Q&A Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
KDNX Posted June 28, 2016 Share Posted June 28, 2016 That is not 148 bricks Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Aanchir Posted June 28, 2016 Share Posted June 28, 2016 That is not 148 bricks The number used in the article is 64,148 bricks (sixty four thousand one hundred and forty eight) bricks. Is the comma what confused you? Some countries use spaces or periods to separate the thousands place from the hundreds place but I was taught to use a comma, which is also what the original Facebook post used. Quote Latest MOC: PAIGE (Prototype Artificial Intelligence, Gynoid Expression) Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Toa Smoke Monster Posted June 28, 2016 Share Posted June 28, 2016 I admit that I'm not really caught up on the latest Ninjago news, but I thought Jay wore an eye patch when the pirate storyline started? Either way, this still looks really cool. I bet a lot of people are going to have fun posing with it. Quote Everyone is one choice away from being the bad guy in another person's story. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Lenny7092 Posted June 29, 2016 Share Posted June 29, 2016 Awesome sculpture! I love how it got the lightning on Jay's nunchucks! Man, Jay looks epic in the sculpture! Quote I like Lego, Bionicle, and Hero Factory! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
KDNX Posted June 29, 2016 Share Posted June 29, 2016 That is not 148 bricksThe number used in the article is 64,148 bricks (sixty four thousand one hundred and forty eight) bricks. Is the comma what confused you? Some countries use spaces or periods to separate the thousands place from the hundreds place but I was taught to use a comma, which is also what the original Facebook post used. where'd that 64 come from really I just didn't even see it I must've thought it was height or something Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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