Tag Archives: Contests

Contests and build challenges are often a great way to get creative juices flowing. Check out our coverage of new contests here, and congratulate the winners of contests that have finished.

Community, Innovation, MOCathalon.

Lego building contests hosted by fans over the years have pushed the building skills and creativity of the individual to the limit, but never has any major contest emphasized cooperation of teams. Recently, MOCpages hosted a team-oriented contest called the MOCathalon that challenged teams of 5 builders to make creations from 30 categories. 18 teams submitted over 450 entries, making this the largest online contest run by Lego fans. The article below by Keith Goldman, one of the four judges, nicely recaps this epic event.

Most of you faithful Bros Brick readers have no doubt either seen or participated in an online building contest of one form or another. Typically these competitions of skill and imagination are theme-specific and require the contestant to build a single model to the best of his or her ability. It has been my pleasure (mostly) to judge a contest that just wrapped up called The MOCathalon, that broke most of the boilerplate contest conventions that I’ve seen and perpetuated over the years. So walk with me won’t you, past the neon lights of Flickr, TBB and Eurobricks, down back alleys and across the railroad tracks to a part of town called MOCpages. Yes, yes, I know many of you think of it as a reservation for violent and unskilled delinquents, but in the best ‘post apoc’ tradition there is an intrepid community of survivors who merit some attention.

The MOCathalon was created by mannkinder Chris Phipson, MOCpages moderator and the guy who brought you such community based events as The MOCie Awards and the MOColympics. The epic struggle featured 4 judges and 90 players from around the globe who were organized into 18 teams that were required to include at least one TFOL and one YFOL. The teams were given a hastily written list of 30 categories ranging from ‘Amalgam’ (mixing of any two LEGO themes) to ‘Xerox’ (scale down a famous model), and given 30 days to build their way through this list. 456 models were ultimately presented for judgment each scoring up to 5 points from each judge. The MOCathalon featured the largest contest turnout I’ve ever seen and required one of the shortest windows to compete. Chris Phipson is proud of his baby, and wants the world to know that it was about a great deal more than prizes:

“The MOCathalon was designed as a way to not only get the community involved as a whole, but also to get the kids and teens working together with the adults. For the most part, Lego contests are one person building one creation, one time. This game attempted to break out of that singular concept and made people come together and work as a team towards the common goal. I’ve always been about building community and that’s what I tried to promote here. By getting the adults to work with the kids, it not only gave the AFOLS a new respect for their teen counterparts, but also helped the kids to feel that the “high and mighty” AFOLS weren’t as far out of reach as they thought.”

The most obvious evidence of the contest’s success is the models themselves. With no specific mention of the contest, 8 entries were blogged over the thirty day period by the Brothers Brick. While these models represent a small percentage of the total entries, they are great examples of the ingenuity and technique employed by the participants. 32 entries in the contest received perfect scores of 20, which is truly an accomplishment considering the unique scoring philosophy of the four judges (Dave Kaleta, Yuri Fassio, Lee Jones and myself) . The winning team of this spirited throw-down called themselves Quinqueviri (Quinqueviri is Latin and can be defined as a council of five men: quinque ‘five’ and ‘viri’ men) and consisted of Kevin Walter, Sven Junga, Ian McDonald, Justin ‘000 000’, and Stefan ‘2×4’. Team Quinqueviri survived an early disqualification resulting in a week long suspension of one of their players, and rallied as a team to finish the contest with 693 points scored from 44 MOCs. A full 25 points higher than their nearest competitor, these five builders proved they can build quickly, in a wide variety of themes, with a consistently high level of quality. Unlike some other teams, there was no dead-weight on Team Quinqueviri; each member contributed important models to the victory. This allied group of Americans and Europeans were far too humble to select their favorite contest entries, so I did it for them. Enjoy the smooth taste of victory:

Stefan: Lego Wear
Justin (000 000): Golf Cart
Kevin Walter: Atlantis
Sven Junga: Olympus C730 Ultra Zoom
Ian McDonald: P-SquidBot

When asked about the MOCathalon experience, Sven Junga remarked: “Another aspect is the conversation. You get to know new people and work with them. People you wouldn’t have met otherwise.” This sentiment was echoed not only by his own team but by most of the competitors.
Beyond the winning team Although it was very difficult to choose a favorite from the landslide of entries, if you put a gun to my head I’d probably have to choose The Mouse and the Moon by Barney Main. This single creation best represents the spirit of the MOCathalon: it is clever, imaginative, and has great technique. The last scene reminds me of Maurice Sendak. Barney should be well known to most faithful Bro’s Brick readers and competed with the hard-charging Team Eurobricks, who might have taken the top spot if given another week.

Beyond the great models, the contest seems to have actually attained some of the lofty goals set by Chris Phipson. When writing this article I posted an open request for comments and received over 50 overwhelmingly positive responses. Contestant “Leda Kat” had this to say about MOCathalon:

“This has been a month of my life I would not change for anything. I learned so much! I’ve only been building for a few months and I am overwhelmed by how much confidence I gained during this contest, that now I feel I can do just about anything! To be forced to step outside my comfort zone and build things I would never have thought of building and succeeding where I was sure I would fail has just opened my eyes to a whole new world where I finally feel at ease and with a family who finally speak my language!”

These sentiments were echoed by many of her fellow contestants, who also raved about the team aspect of the competition, and the chance for old and young builders to interact and learn from each other. Another high-scoring participant was Philip Stark, and he sums up the contest in this way:

“This contest was extremely fun for a variety of reasons. My favorite part was simply being part of a team of people I really enjoy working with. They’re a great group of people, and it was so much fun sharing our creations with one another, and helping each other out from time to time. It was also helpful to me, because the contest challenged me to build some things I would normally never build, like a comic for the 5 Man Team category, or a miniscale building for LEGO Architecture.”

As a judge, I can also say that I benefited from the MOCathalon by being introduced to dozens of new builders, hundreds of new creations, and being forced to examine some of my own attitudes and prejudices about building. Like the players, I was a part of a great team of judges, and enjoyed the camaraderie. All contests have problems and MOCathalon had its share: quarreling judges, poorly written categories, inconsistent judging, dropout players, and conflict of interest when Phipson decided to compete in his own games. All of these challenges were overcome with a combination of communication, effort and above all teamwork. So if you want to experience a truly innovative building contest, and think you’ve got the chops, keep your eye on MOCpages, the other white-meat.

The Brothers Brick is funded by our readers and the community. Articles may include affiliate links, and when you purchase products from those links, TBB may earn a commission that helps support the site.

New Space Contest – Put Your Brick Where Your Mouth Is! [Contest]

Put Your Brick Where Your Mouth Is!  LEGO Contest

That’s right, it’s a new contest, over at classic-space.com. The challenge, put your brick where your mouth is. People love to talk about how they could do a better job designing a LEGO set than the folks at LEGO do. So here’s the challenge, DO IT! Build a great space set! Mark Stafford, a designer at LEGO, has graciously offered to serve as a judge for this contest, but it is NOT an official LEGO contest. LEGO didn’t put me up to this, and they won’t be taking any of your ideas and turning them into sets. There will be prizes, though, thanks to Steve Witt. Each size category winner will receive a space set of that size.

More details are here.

The Brothers Brick is funded by our readers and the community. Articles may include affiliate links, and when you purchase products from those links, TBB may earn a commission that helps support the site.

Theme Bending Contest

Tired of castle builders having all the fun in their Time Twister’s Contest? Now you can take any Lego set and remake it in another theme. Here, the host Tom Williamson bends the Shanghai Chase into the space theme using only pieces from the set. You have until March 31st to submit an entry. The first place prize is a nice V-19 Torrent.

The Brothers Brick is funded by our readers and the community. Articles may include affiliate links, and when you purchase products from those links, TBB may earn a commission that helps support the site.

The best ASS model contest

With a title so catchy, I just had to share it on the blog. FBTB’s newest contest asks you to build an Alternate Separatist Shuttle model, oh what else were you thinking? The winner will receive a cool 8088 ARC-170 Starfighter. Head over to FBTB to view the details. The deadline is March 31st.

The Brothers Brick is funded by our readers and the community. Articles may include affiliate links, and when you purchase products from those links, TBB may earn a commission that helps support the site.

What the Death Star looks like as a floating rock

Barney Main (SlyOwl) knows our soft spot when he built his entry for the Time Twisters Contest. The association with 10188 Death Star is so obvious and hilarious that you don’t even need to know the rules of the contest to predict this as a likely winner.

The Brothers Brick is funded by our readers and the community. Articles may include affiliate links, and when you purchase products from those links, TBB may earn a commission that helps support the site.

Twisted? Most certainly.

There are some fantastic entries coming in, for Classic-Castle‘s Time Twisters contest. For a brief re-cap, the idea is take an existing set, and turn your wayback machine a few centuries…or in this case, switch your “fantasy worlds” entirely!

Rod Gillies weighs in with his Twisted AT-AT:

The Brothers Brick is funded by our readers and the community. Articles may include affiliate links, and when you purchase products from those links, TBB may earn a commission that helps support the site.

The Time Twisters Contest [News]

Two members of Classic Castle, Aliencat and Bluesecrets, are putting on something called “The Time Twisters Contest“. I know you are wondering if this has something to do with that bizarre theme from the ’90s. The answer is ‘No’.

They want you to “medievalize” an official Lego set….any official Lego set. Here is an example of what they are looking for:

Lego Time Twisters.

Pick a set, any set. Figure out how it would look as a “Castle” set and build it. Naturally, you don’t have to actually own the original set, as you do not need use the pieces. Go Twist some Time!

The Brothers Brick is funded by our readers and the community. Articles may include affiliate links, and when you purchase products from those links, TBB may earn a commission that helps support the site.

Paul Lee & son win national LEGO Minibuild contest [News]

Paul Lee and his son entered their local LEGO Store’s monthly Minibuild contest back in September, and recently learned that their entry has just won the national contest, and will be featured as this coming September’s monthly model.

LEGO Miniland boy with backpack

It’s a great little Miniland character that would look perfect on the tiny streets of LEGOLAND California, complete with sneakers and backpack casually slung over one shoulder. Congratulations to the father and son team!

The Brothers Brick is funded by our readers and the community. Articles may include affiliate links, and when you purchase products from those links, TBB may earn a commission that helps support the site.

Skull Beneath the Skin–a JRC Entry

Derfel Cadarn has cast his lot for the Jolly Roger Contest at Forbidden Cove with this fantastic entry, Skull Beneath the Skin (for the Pirate Island category, naturally).

I adore that ramshackle structure…it just screams pirate-goodness. It also looks more stable than some boats I’ve seen on Lake Union, but I digress…

The Brothers Brick is funded by our readers and the community. Articles may include affiliate links, and when you purchase products from those links, TBB may earn a commission that helps support the site.

Colossal Castle Contest Winners Announced! [News]

The Classic-Castle Admins have finished the judging and announced the results! Check out the winners. There are some excellent castle creations there. If you need more Castle goodness, take a peek at all the entries. While there were less entries this year, the quality seems to continue to rise. I can tell you, it was hard to judging this year.

The Brothers Brick is funded by our readers and the community. Articles may include affiliate links, and when you purchase products from those links, TBB may earn a commission that helps support the site.

Announcing “Big in Japan” – collaborative display for TBB readers at BrickCon 2010

A LEGO zombie apocalypse is so last year (and the year before that). We’re pleased to announce that the collaborative display that The Brothers Brick will be coordinating this fall at BrickCon in Seattle will be inspired by the rich history and culture of Japan.

LEGO Hayao Miyazaki Totori, Mei, and Satsuki

Like these wonderful characters from Hayao Miyazaki’s My Neighbor Totoro by Iain Heath (Ochre Jelly) — elements of the “Miyazakitopia” section Iain is planning for the display — we’ll welcome creations spanning many different eras and building styles. Part of the fun of a collaborative display is figuring out how to fit it all together once all the builders and their creations arrive at the convention!

LEGO Jizou | お地蔵様From the epic Battle of Sekigahara to Godzilla battling Mothra in retro-future Tokyo, both reality and fiction from the Land of the Rising Sun provide plenty of inspiration for great LEGO creations.

Many of my earliest posted LEGO creations were inspired by the legends and history of land where I was born, and I’m personally looking forward to building again from that cultural heritage.

LEGO DekotoraThis is the earliest we’ve announced a collaborative display — for good reason. We hope that Big in Japan will inspire some truly different LEGO creations (like Proudlove‘s dekotora), alongside the iconic samurai and mecha we expect. From sketching designs to buying the parts you need on Bricklink, planning substantial contributions to the display may take the next eight or nine months.

As in years past, we’ll have prizes and giveaways, though we’re still working out the details about what those might be. In the meantime, break out those Kurosawa DVDs, crack open some Natsume Soseki novels, and start building!

The Brothers Brick is funded by our readers and the community. Articles may include affiliate links, and when you purchase products from those links, TBB may earn a commission that helps support the site.

The Jolly Roger Contest is well under way

Forbidden Cove’s first major contest, the Jolly Roger, set sail on the 1st of the month and there are some very good pirate creations cruising in. Here is a few of my favorites so far.

Lego Pirate Outpost

Dutch Soldier Outpost by Nieks

Lego Pirate Vignette

Under the Waves by Elephant_Captain

Lego Pirate Island

Pirate’s Island by SlyOwl

The Brothers Brick is funded by our readers and the community. Articles may include affiliate links, and when you purchase products from those links, TBB may earn a commission that helps support the site.