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  2. Tente (toy) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tente_(toy)

    Additionally, although modeled on Lego with nearly identical brick and plate outer dimensions (including the fact that three stacked plates is equivalent in height to one brick), the studs of Tente pieces have a larger diameter than Lego pieces, resulting in them being incompatible. Hasbro marketed the toys in the United States and Japan. Some ...

  3. Building blocks (toy) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Building_blocks_(toy)

    ELGO Plastics, Inc. was established as a division of Halsam Products Company in 1941." It produced building blocks under the name American Plastic Bricks from 1946, and was the dominant American supplier through the 1950's. [19] A full history of Halsam and its founders cites the existence of interlocking plastic bricks prior to LEGO in America ...

  4. Lego - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lego

    Lego Games launched in 2009, was a series of Lego-themed board games designed by Cephas Howard and Reiner Knizia [117] [118] in which the players usually build the playing board out of Lego bricks and then play with Lego-style players. Examples of the games include "Minotaurus", in which players roll dice to move characters within a brick-build ...

  5. BrickLink - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BrickLink

    It allowed users to upload their own Lego set designs into a competition. The winning designs had the opportunity to be crowdfunded and, if successful, sold on the BrickLink marketplace. [15] It has similarities with Lego Ideas where the designs that get more than 10.000 likes get accepted to finals and the winning one becomes an official Lego set.

  6. Brick by Brick: How Lego Rewrote the Rules of Innovation

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brick_by_Brick:_How_Lego...

    The authors attribute the company's rescue to the efforts of new CEO, Jørgen Vig Knudstorp, who cut costs (by, among others, reducing the number of bricks produced), engaged with the Lego fandom community, and refocused the company's efforts on its core business (design and marketing of interlocking plastic bricks) rather than side activities ...

  7. K'Nex - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/K'Nex

    The toy's building system consists of interlocking plastic rods, connectors, blocks, gears, wheels, and other components, which can be assembled to form a wide variety of models, machines, and architectural structures. While K'Nex is designed for children ages 5–12, a bigger version, Kid K'Nex, is aimed towards children 5 and younger.

  8. Lego clone - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lego_clone

    Lego and Tyco Industries fought in US courts over Tyco's line of interlocking bricks in the 1980s with Tyco prevailing. [4] On August 31, 1987, the US District Court ruled that Tyco could continue making Super Blocks, its Lego clone bricks, but ordered Tyco to stop using the Lego trademark and not to state that they were "Lego, but only cheaper".

  9. Construction set - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Construction_set

    Lego bricks are a construction set example. Interlocking Disks enable the construction of high-symmetry models such as that of C 60 Fullerene . 1970s No. 2 Meccano set Zometool model of the great grand stellated 120-cell Jeujura wooden construction set (Swiss chalet) Fischertechnik computing with a C64 interface Constri