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LEGO DREAMZzz shorts Logan’s Training Tutorials Episode 6 [92] July 22, 2023: 7: LEGO DREAMZzz shorts Logan’s Training Tutorials Episode 7 [93] July 27, 2023: 8: LEGO DREAMZzz shorts Logan’s Training Tutorials Episode 8 [94] July 29, 2023: 9: LEGO DREAMZzz shorts Logan’s Training Tutorials Episode 9 [95] August 4, 2023: 10
Lego Icons (formerly known as Lego Creator Expert and stylized as LEGO Icons) is a series of Lego construction toys aimed at a demographic of adolescents and adults. Beginning in 2000 without an established logo or icon, Icons features models such as aircraft, sculptures, and world buildings, selling as exclusives with numerous specialized elements and complex building techniques.
Lego/Logo would later be commercialized by the Lego group as the (Lego) Technic Control Center. [10]: 3 It was observed that using the Lego/Logo system, children developed a form of knowledge about the physical world that allowed those even without mathematics or verbal skills to solve problems effectively using the system. [12]: 23
Lego Friends (stylized as LEGO Friends) is a product range of Lego construction toys designed primarily for girls that was launched in 2012. It introduced "mini-doll" figures, which are about the same size as traditional Lego minifigures but are more detailed and realistic. The original cast consisted of Andrea, Olivia, Stephanie, Mia and Emma.
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The Lego DC Super Hero Girls theme aimed to introduce a product line that reimagines female DC superheroes and supervillains in Lego form as students at high school. [6] [8] In partnership with Warner Bros. Consumer Products and DC Entertainment, the theme aimed to provide children with a "relatable world filled with aspirational characters, immersive stories and action-packed missions that ...
Lego Belville (stylized as LEGO Belville) was a Lego theme designed to appeal primarily to girls. First introduced in 1994, the theme included multi-jointed doll-like characters that were larger in scale than the traditional Lego minifigure. The toy sets were produced from standard Lego bricks and larger pieces, often in a pink and purple ...
The Lego Life magazine was a quarterly publication that promoted use of Lego products. It was aimed at children between the ages of five and thirteen. Launched in 2017 as the replacement for the Lego Club Magazine, it was produced in hard copy and digital versions. [10] In November 2024 the name was changed to simply Lego Magazine. [11]