Castle Grayskull

Today I finished building this:

It’s a 3500 piece model of Castle Grayskull from Masters Of The Universe. It looks like LEGO but it’s actually ‘Mega Construx’, which is a LEGO ripoff competitor. The kit came out for $250 but I got it for quite a bit less on Amazon, both because I love the design and because the reviews were overwhelmingly positive.

The packaging is beautiful and opening the massive (and heavy!) box revealed lovely art and a fantastic manual. The 50+ bags of pieces are separated into four smaller boxes each with their own art, and the entire thing screamed quality.

The kit was built in five parts, each of which took 2-3 hours. It wasn’t a trivial build, but not as challenging as the more complex LEGO technic kits. However the mega construx pieces are slightly lower quality than LEGO and occasionally were difficult to actually push together! As a result it was physically more difficult to make this set than your average LEGO kit 🙂

There’s also the occasional bit of molding flash visible (as you can see above) and the manufacturing of the pieces isn’t as perfect as LEGO, but overall I was extremely impressed with how well the set was designed and went together. I had routinely dismissed LEGO competitors before making this kit, but now I’ll have to keep my eyes open in case anything else of this quality is released.

That’s the front of the finished castle…

And that is the back. Note the curved walls and roof, and the 100+ individual little brown pieces used for roof tiles. It’s a tall kit, very sturdy and heavy. I feel if I dropped it it would hardly break!

Of course it opens and has massive amounts of ‘play features’ including several doors, a jail cell (with creepy inhabitant), a moving throne, a cannon, ladder, moving lift etc. It came with six minifigs (and I bought a few extras myself) which are a good LEGO-scale equivalent of the original guys from the 1980s.

I’ve always loved LEGO castles and for many years have wished for a highly detailed and large kit (perhaps of Neuschwanstein) so when I saw this I bought it as much for it being a castle as the (cool!) MOTU origin.

It was great fun to build and looks wonderful up on my bookshelf. But there’s still a spot free if LEGO is inspired and finally releases a detailed castle of their own…

World Postcard Day

October 1 is World Postcard Day! This is a celebration of the joy of postcards, and to commemorate the day you should send at least one postcard!

So – this Thursday – grab a postcard and start writing. It doesn’t matter what you write, so write anything! If you’re short of ideas, here are a few:
– Your favorite animal, food, movie, song etc.
– Your goals for the future, or historical achievement you’re very proud of
– Your favorite memory from before the year 2000
– A joke, poem, limerick or lyric

The stamps are important too. Go for variety if you can, or if you’re sending domestically and only need one stamp try for an unusual or pretty one (this means no simple flags if you’re in the US!).

Send the card to anyone, as long as it’s me. Better yet, send more than one to family and friends. Be sure to mention World Postcard Day. And try to get it in the mail on October 1st 🙂

Speaking of cards, this is as good a time as any for a Postcrossing update.

I’ve now received 248 cards and sent about 260. I check my postbox every 2 weeks or so and they keep coming even during the pandemic. The average time for a card to arrive is longer now (in some cases excessively) but so far I haven’t had any of the cards I sent not arrive.

I’ve got a mini-album I use to showcase the favorites I have received, either due to the card, the stamps or the message. I’ve almost filled it and will have to buy another album before too long.

That’s on the back of an Australian card I received where the sender used vintage stamps. I was quite impressed that they used a $0.45 silver jubilee stamp from 1977! Most stamps are good forever, and it would be fun to buy some older US stamps and do the same one day.

I’m showing off the above due to the astonishing penmanship of Grigorii. Also Russian stamps are always very big and very pretty, and there seems to be an endless variety of them. Not every card is lettered this well, and I’ve receive some I could barely read at all!

The above is the most extraordinary card I’ve received so far, from the Aland Islands off the coast of Finland. There’s very few Postcrossers living there so it’s unlikely I’ll ever get another and receiving this was a genuine treat.

I’ve sent to 41 countries and received from 42. Russia, China and Germany are far ahead on the list of sent and received countries, and I still haven’t received anything from South America. I think I’m loving Postcrossing even more now due to the pandemic, and no matter where the card is from I love seeing it in my mailbox.

But of course the best cards are from those we know. Given we can’t travel now you may think there’s no good reason to send one, which is why World Postcard Day is so timely this year. Please consider sending some, but even if you don’t watch your mailbox since you know I won’t let the day pass without sending a bunch myself 🙂

Mint In Box

I bought some clear plastic boxes:

“What the hell are these?” you ask? These, my friends, are polyethylene terephthalate protective cases for retro game boxes! I bought 150 of them: 25 each for NES and SNES/N64 and 100 for GB/GBC/GBA/VB. Since my collection has value, I reckoned it was time to add a little extra protection to the more expensive titles I own.

The protectors ship flat and fold into boxes very slightly large than the game cases. Insert a game, close the tabs, and you’ve got yourself a game protected from the grubby hands of the typical gamer!

Every game above I purchased myself new. I’ve kept them in astonishingly good condition over the years as they have appreciated. I paid $20 for Dragon Warrior IV 25+ years ago; it’s $200 now. Final Fantasy cost me $14; it’s $150 now. You can see why I put them in cases!

But it gets better with the SNES stuff:

Those three combined would easily fetch $750 today! Possibly more since they’re in immaculate condition (Chrono Trigger alone could probably fetch $500). Keeping them in cases should preserve them for many years longer.

The Nintendo 64 boxes are the same size as SNES boxes so they share protectors. This ‘chrome’ collectors edition of Zelda fetches a pretty penny today and is just one of a few N64 games I own that sell for much more than I paid when I bought them.

If you’re astonished by these prices be mindful it’s all about the boxes. The cardboard boxes Nintendo used for their first few consoles tore easily and many people just tossed them out. At least 50% – sometimes 75%+ – of the value of a lot of these games lies in owning the box and manual, hence the utility of these box protectors.

Box protectors are a bit of a rabbit hole to delve into though. Frustratingly Nintendo used different boxes in different regions so I can’t protect my Japanese copy of Sin and Punishment or any of my Famicom games. There’s also a few (silly valuable) N64 games with custom boxes that don’t fit in the protectors. But I’ve kept them in good condition for 20 years already and should be able to for another 20 at least.

I’ve still got the 100 Gameboy cases to put on. I’ve got about 260 boxes games that they can fit so it’ll be fun working out which ones are worth protecting. Maybe I’ll post an update when I’m done 🙂