Lego World Racer

It’s that time of the year
Time for you to crack open the wallet for someone other than yourself. Sure you could use our reference guide of games and reviews to help you sort through what video games to give and what to avoid, but why not try something a little different. For the fourth year in a row the brains (and Mikes, Lukes, Owens and Stephens) at Kotaku Tower have put together a list of eclectic toys, gadgets and doodads – from prison toilet to dinosaur-infused iPhone case, aircraft carrier to freaky shoes, to give and ask for.
Now, for your viewing pleasure, Kotaku’s 2010 Gift Guide of Obscene Nicety and Sublime Naughtiness.You love the video games; why not give the toys a try? LEGO bricks have been exercising the imaginations of children young and old since the 1940s. Today’s LEGO sets follow an easy-to-collect formula, with themed series that start with small, under $10 sets and range all the way up to massive $100 play sets. The World Racers, Atlantis, Space Police, and Power Miner sets all offer nice entry-level sets perfect for introducing someone you have to buy a gift for the joys of stepping on jagged LEGO bricks in bare feet.
Succulent Unicorn meat isn’t easy come to by since 2009′s surprise closure of Radiant Farms brought on by a nasty outbreak of Unicorn Dream Flu (UDF) and the subsequent death of millions of childhoods. Fortunately, you still land this plushie replica of a vivisected Unicorn, perfect for making children cry. A perfect gift for that OCD Apple evangelist in your life – everbody has one – who can’t stop organizing his iPhone’s home screen. Just don’t use this set of 18 on a real iPhone, it might, I dunno, mess up the screen or the memory or something.
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Lego World Racers Wreckage Road Review : LEGO 8898