Hm, so the Lego site is listing the Devastator as 4874 pcs at a price point of $850. The Falcon was 7541pcs at $900. This is why folks are feeling that the Devastator is overpriced. I'm not sure how I feel about this. I know I want to get it...but I'm wondering if they'll bring the price down to be more in line with their usual pricing if I wait.
I doubt they will, I don't know why people think every piece should be the same price. A 1x1 isn't the same as the huge panels.
I don't feel that every piece should be the same price. But I do feel that this set is overpriced by about $100-$150 given their general pricing scheme. I'm looking at this as a halfway model between the Executor and the Falcon, as those three sets are close in size with the difference being the piece count.
To me, this is making me question how much I want the set, instead of the easy slam-dunk decision it would have been in the $600-700 (cdn) range.
Last edited by WhiteTiger; 09-07-2019 at 07:23 PM.
I doubt they will, I don't know why people think every piece should be the same price. A 1x1 isn't the same as the huge panels.
I don't mind them moving away from the price-per-piece model, because I think that might stop some of the "we will use 3 pieces here when 1 would do" that I've seen in a few of the ones I've done recently.
LEGO is releasing a Land Rover Defender set. Unfortunately it’s not the old version, which isn’t surprising because LR had to know the new design was controversial so they’re marketing the hell out of it.
The set has some interesting moving parts. I’m not sure if the low range gearbox actually effects the wheels but I think I’m going to buy this one to find out.
I'm not a Lego guy but dropped in the thread out of curiosity.....
Am I reading this right that some sets are up to $1000 with average sets ranging from $400-$700? I know I am very out of touch when it comes to this stuff but that is absolutely absurd. How can mass produced little squares of plastic cost so much? You can get really good 4K TV's for less money! I am seriously flabbergasted at these prices...clearly the economy isn't that bad when Lego can get away with charging those prices.
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I'm not a Lego guy but dropped in the thread out of curiosity.....
Am I reading this right that some sets are up to $1000 with average sets ranging from $400-$700? I know I am very out of touch when it comes to this stuff but that is absolutely absurd. How can mass produced little squares of plastic cost so much? You can get really good 4K TV's for less money! I am seriously flabbergasted at these prices...clearly the economy isn't that bad when Lego can get away with charging those prices.
I think the most expensive set is $800 and the average is closer to $100. Most parents are buying something for considerably cheaper than what gets posted in this thread. We’re adults with disposable income. There are threads where people spend hundreds on Scotch or thousands on a watch. Hobbies can be expensive. As long as you can afford it that’s not a problem.
I buy some of the cheap creator sets but I don’t post about them because I don’t think they’re are cool and interesting as the big licenced sets. That licensing adds to the cost. Lego is also expensive to manufacture because it’s built to last and be compatible with pieces from decades ago. If you want cheap buy the competitors stuff.
I'm not a Lego guy but dropped in the thread out of curiosity.....
Am I reading this right that some sets are up to $1000 with average sets ranging from $400-$700? I know I am very out of touch when it comes to this stuff but that is absolutely absurd. How can mass produced little squares of plastic cost so much? You can get really good 4K TV's for less money! I am seriously flabbergasted at these prices...clearly the economy isn't that bad when Lego can get away with charging those prices.
No, you are seeing the extreme end of it. Lego sets, on average, come out to about 10c/piece. That gingerbread house, for instance, is about 1400 pieces of lego, and retails for about $140.
From my trip to the lego store in Chinook the other day, I'd say that most sets are in the $50-200 range.
But then you get to the big sets that are designed for adults. Sets that are 4500 or so pieces (the Imperial Star Destroyer I was talking about) or a set that's 7500 pieces (the largest set ever made).
The problem with the new Star Destroyer set is that a lot of the public feel that it IS too expensive, and that it should be costing less, but that it's been priced higher than it should be (which is a debate I'm not going to get into anymore).
I guess if you want to look at it this way, the 'average' set that an adult is going to buy for themselves more for display purposes than to 'play' with...yes, will range from $400-$900.
But if you go to the lego store with $10-$50 and are looking for something for your/a kid, you'll come away with plenty to keep them busy, too.
Star Wars licensing is really expensive and an ongoing cost. As well you look at the design work that goes into it, its insane.
I would love to buy the Star Destroyer, but the cheap me won't spend that kind of cash.
In the old days (yeah I went there) we just bought buckets of random pieces and we would build whatever we wanted. One week it would be a tie fighter or Star Destroyer (not near as nice as the kits) the next week we'd build a town, one day me and my cousin figured out how to build laser guns with holsters.
My favorite toys growing up, no question were Lego and Mechano (whatever happened to that?)
I remember getting the military set, you could build a tank or a howitzer or a self propelled artillary piece and it came with a spring loaded gun barrel that would shoot a little white bullet like 30 yards.
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Lego isn't really going up in price either. The big sets have always been expensive. If you look at the prices of the big sets in the 1970s and 1980s and adjust for inflation, many are actually cheaper now. Many of the earlier sets were also very basic, containing very few specially molded pieces.
If you look at the prices of the big sets in the 1970s and 1980s and adjust for inflation, many are actually cheaper now.
Substantially. IIRC the Space Monorail was around $200 CDN when it came out (~$365 today). A comparable in the current LEGO line would be something like the passenger train, and that retails at $200 today.
Lego isn't really going up in price either. The big sets have always been expensive. If you look at the prices of the big sets in the 1970s and 1980s and adjust for inflation, many are actually cheaper now. Many of the earlier sets were also very basic, containing very few specially molded pieces.
Additionally, it also tends to hold its value rather well, too. Sets generally only ever go up in value, especially discontinued sets.
Substantially. IIRC the Space Monorail was around $200 CDN when it came out (~$365 today). A comparable in the current LEGO line would be something like the passenger train, and that retails at $200 today.
That's $350 USD or $462 CAD. The set is very tame by today's standards and would cost about half of that.
The closest similar modern day set for around the same price is the roller coaster at $479.99, but that set is a lot more involved, bigger, and has more pieces:
You're getting significantly more value today. Sets as detailed and large as the very expensive modern day sets just weren't around before.