i was going to comment this! it'd look awesome and you wouldn't even need them to be the native american figures (assuming the tents are never removed for guests to see)
I would argue that the Lego Group should make lightning options at a far greater extent than they are today. It DOES matter to many models whether or not it lights up. Take most car models as a simple example. While there are third party solutions available, the cost, replacing pieces and other weird workarounds you need to do to make it work is more off-putting than it needs to be. If the bricks were made for lightning out of the box, I think more people would love it and use it!
I often see builds with special lighting that are rather poorly designed or simply don't hide their LEDs or wiring but here it's so masterfully done that the result really feels immersive. Well done!
The lights have completely transformed the western town, well done. Do you have plans to add a full day/night cycle to your museum? It would be wonderful to produce some ambient sounds that play during different times of the day to really push the immersion. Cicadas and birds in the day, crickets and crackling campfires at night.
I know a lot of indigenous tribes in the area would often stay in really cool houses made of reeds and grass more than tps, and might be a good step in leaning away from stereotypes u wete worried about. You can Google native American dwellings in the west and find some. Also bison were rlly common game in these areas, and it would be rlly common to see more wildlife. A wild west town would probably be full of rats or possums. Common for people to have cats to deal with them. And it would be awesome to see a coyote or bobcat standing watch on a canyon.
Absolutely no words for all your amazing work. The planning, finding exactly what’s right and of course all the costs… insane! Your videos are the highlight of the week! Much love from the Netherlands! ❤
Maybe a camp fire somewhere on top of a mountain plateau would be nice! You can make the story, group of hunters or maybe bandits plotting to rob the bank or a stage coach
I’m amazed! Simply the best western scene ever. I love that you’re adding lights- I think maybe another campfire with a camp up on one of the platforms would draw your eye back and give a lot of depth. Keep it up!
The little holes you made in the bricks is fine, erasing the back side of the bandit head felt slightly wrong but had good results. Everything in this scene looks amazing!
As someone with Choctaw heritage, I love the shoutout in the corner! Some people might think it’s stereotyping, but it’s a cool reference to my ancestors ❤️ Love the videos!
@@WKJFilms The guy from this channel is a German in Germany. So his native people would be the Germanic tribes of some sorts. As a Swiss I don't know precisely how he thinks, culturally, but if he is anything like I would expect, then his nod wasn't for some cultural reason. Over here in Europa we don't really feel as much of cultural connection or a historical guilt towards the native Americans. We just mostly know about them through wester movies or books like for example Karl May. I'm pretty sure the nod he is doing is towards one of the classic LEGO sets. After all he highlights it several times, that those are the original LEGO pieces from that set and never once mentions the cultural aspects of the native Americans. I noticed that you seem to be interested in different cultures and so I wanted to show you how a culture different from your own might see this topic.
Even when electricity became fairly common, towns like this would often still have fire-based lighting. It's totally reasonable to have your bank and saloon main lights be electric, but then have some of the small lights inside flickering like a lantern.
I think you can add an old broken wood bridge between two mountains because the back part of the town looks a little bit basic and uncolored if you ask me. Maybe you can do it on top of the river so it looks more realistic and logical. You have a lot of details along the town including the mountains but I think you need something bigger than a detail at the back that will catch attention at first look. Love your videos mate, keep it up.
This is so Gorgeous! I would ADORE Lego revisiting a proper Wild-West theme! I think with their more modern resources (and care for history, diversity, etc) it would be GREAT. And it would give the CMF figures somewhere to live
I’m not an expert on the matter, but I think, historically, tipis were used primarily by nomadic plains dwelling Native Americans who followed bison herds for resources. I would make the ground area under that small section into dried plains grass if something like it was available from Lego. In the southwest desert regions it would be more appropriate to make some small mud brick adobe houses, maybe on the side of the wild west diorama opposite from the tipis, like the town was a meeting place between two First Nations territories. Overall, the town does look pretty magical, though.
This looks so amazing! It really lends a feeling of life to the entire build. You've put so many hours and so much love into this project, and it really shows!
Hoolllyyy cow! The campfire lighting inside of the tee-pees is genius. It feels so alive, I completely agree with adding a few more flickering lights throughout the town. The ambiance it adds is unmatched.
I have not yet thought about how to illuminate my city but I will certainly take inspiration from him because I plan to make videos even at night in the future
Great job with all the lights, one small suggestion, add some quick disconnects to each building so you don’t have to cut the wire every time you want to work on them and it also lets you make all the wiring in advance and then add it to buildings after. Keep up the great work.
You should add ambient background sound for the different places. So like a windy wild west with horses for example in the Wild West. And then city background noise for the Lego city
the tps can be custom printed you could find actual historical prints and build a L shape wing using the Navajo settlements also you could put cracks in the rocks I know they are Halloween but you could throw random aliens or crypteds in some holes and you could add sediment of minerals and a river with gold to move towards a Aztec Mylan build with heavy jungle maybe a few indy capers or explorer in a heavy jungle
The lighting is awesome it brings so much life to the wild west town, also the flickering fires in the Indian village look amazing the real cherry on the cake. Well done everyone involved!
That flickering LED-s are first in the community. THEY ARE GREAT!!! Please. show us "how to solder yourself" video. Thank you. You are awesome INSPIRING creator. :)
A big rock structure in the foreground, with a tunnel to the native Indians to be hiding from the westerners. Would look really cool! You already have a smaller rock structure behind the tepee. If you continue from that wall then build a large rock attached with a tunnel leading towards the beige path, (where that cowboy is). This would had more height, depth, detail, and story to the entire western theme. Yeehaw
Although it may be quite tricky, I think it would look awesome to have a big headlight on the front the train. Just imagine it rolling through the town, lighting up the buildings and foliage as it passes.
In response to everyone making the correction: it's worth noting that many tribes DO specifically refer to themselves as "Indian" or "American Indian". "Native American" is _commonly_ recognized as referring to the First People of North America, but it can also refer to indigenous people of South and Central America. It's also a term many feel is another instance of imposed language/speaking over them, and Indian is the term used by not just the US government in recognizing their sovereignty but by Tribal governments themselves. I'm mostly just summing up the points of a CGP Grey video on the subject, so it's worth watching that to get a more detailed explanation. But when in doubt about what to call an indigenous group your best bet is always going to be primary sources -- look up how people in the group refer to themselves, check the websites and publications of official governments and institutions of the group, or even just ask members of the group yourself. More generally speaking, if you don't know their preferred name and can't check, "Indigenous people of [nation/continent name]" has been a safer fallback than "Native [nation/continent resident name]" in my experience. In response to the video: I've been watching your videos on and off for maybe a couple months now, your work is incredible and this is no exception! Before I'd only seen the Wild West section when it appeared in the coastal city videos, so it being the focus this time was a nice change of pace. I did wince a bit at drilling the holes, but mostly because it seems like really delicate work and you could potentially ruin the connective ability of the studs if you're not careful... but the end result speaks for itself! I appreciate you specifying that's how the original set was when acknowledging the village looking a bit stereotypical; depending on how much you want to improve on that, it might help to narrow your point of reference down to one or two specific tribes from the Western US that have close-enough parallels to the designs of the minifigures and tepees. Once you have a specific cultural guide to work from, you can fine-tune and expand on the details accordingly. But yeah. Awesome work, looking forward to the next video, and apologies for the wall of text!
Technically, neither "Indian" nor "Native American" is fully accurate. Indigenous Indians are not from India, and all American-born citizens are native. It is but a matter of time before "Indiana" is cancelled (probably not).
2:41 - So I live in Utah where this landscape is iconic. The sediment lines are typically at the same heights, maybe a little up and down with some activity but from a distance at a large scale the way you're doing it looks right.
For your Lego city you could use different colour lights like white in some houses and yellow for others like houses in real life have, you could also use colours like purple and red to represent houses that have LEDs in their rooms (like a house I can see from my window that has purple light coming out of their room at night)
There is just something so satisfying about the build colours and design, and the lightning just elevates it to another level. Everything is put together so well
You should add a campfire site in the mountains with a light to illuminate the background and draw the attention there also. It would also be cool to have a small light at a mine/mineshaft. Amazing work!
I think leaving the rocks in the mountains like that was a good choice. They look amazing and rough! The entire city is astonishingly detailed and well made!
I live out in texas and i love this moc so much! i've been out to the western desert a bit and you've got the terrain right! keep up the great work! this has given me inspiration to go build!
I have a question, since you have been to such a desert. The way he placed the plants is equidistant and quite common. Shouldn't they be more sparse and clustered?
It would be a really fun detail to add some more specific details on the indigenous tribe, every tribe's characteristics depends on the land they live on, and the tipis were more for plains environments. "Hogans" were mostly used in like western looking areas which were basically dirt, wood and stone huts. Also maybe you could do something cool with making a sweatlodge too!
This is BY FAR the best western moc I have ever seen. Amazing job with everything. Although lights for Lego's are a pain to deal with and I don't have the patients for it, you guys did a superb job. Man, you make everything I want to do look like an amateur. Back to the drawing board for me. lol! A+++++
The lighting adds a whole other level of detail to these scenes. Some very ingenius methods of running the wiring too! I'd love to know how the lighting is going to be controlled as part of the day/night cycle.
Wonderful eraser trick with yhe dual print minifig head! Im glad that that 2x2 wanted printed tiles found some use to for an easy mini-story and scavanger hunt for your guests to explore the display for. Keep up the amazing work!
Absolutely FANTASTIC, AMAZING, BRILLIANT, GENIOUS. You are by far the most talented LEGO TH-camr I watch. You are an inspiration. Keep up the great work.
The lighting is extremely good looking! I have just a small suggestion and i dont know how difficult it is to do, but i think it would look slightly more realistic if the flikkering of the fires would slightly off set between the different tipi's and the campfire. Because now it looks slightly unnatural because every fire flickers at the exact same time. Still the whole build looks extremely good and is insanely impressive keep it up!
love the build but as a historian a few notes: -Tipis existed in the plains and were used mainly by the Sioux and Pawnee tribes, you wouldn't really find them in a desert climate. -The term native Americans or native peoples is usually a better term to use than "indian" -in the desert you would find tribes like the Yoeme peoples and the Pascua Yaqui peoples. They typically would build huts and small wooden shelters/houses rather than tipis. Love the build btw and big fan of your work! This comment isnt meant to criticize rather to inform :D
@@primitiveairraid There is certainly a lesson to be learned from this. But it will still be a longer process, because in Germany even the official Wikipedia entry for the native people is still "Idianer". Basically, this designation is used by everyone. The well-known German dictionary Duden has at least added "discriminatory" to the word in recent years. You don't get that out of the language use so fast. Especially older people often resist such changes. It's just always been that way, we grew up with it," is the response one sometimes gets.
my god, this is absolutely insane. your dedication and passion to the craft is extremely admirable and the final product is so aesthetically pleasing, thank you for creating these and showcasing it on youtube for all to see!
Hey! Amazing video as always. Small note, “Native American” is the modern verbiage for “American Indian” in the US. You can also use “indigenous” which has come into fashion in recent years. Indian was a misnomer given by Columbus who thought he landed in the Indies (modern day Indonesia). Wanted to drop a note incase you’re doing any plaques or signage. Keep up the good work!
While "Indian" is a term commonly used in the United States to describe certain Indigenous peoples, and while "Indian" is a term used in legislation and legal terms in Canada, "Indian" is also a historically incorrect and racist term applied to Indigenous peoples. Calling an Indigenous person or group "Indian" can have the same impact as calling an Indian person (an actual Indian) "p__i", or Jew "k__e", for instance. If you are looking to adapt an old Lego set to your new and thoughtfully custom-designed Lego world, then perhaps you could also invest an effort into updating the "cowboys & Indians" trope to reflect an informed portrayal of Indigenous peoples, including a reflection of Indigenous peoples not being a homogenous group or possessing a monoculture portrayed in non-Indigenous popular culture and/or early anthropological accounts serving the global project of colonization. It could make for a fun, challenging, and educational project.
Simply amazing - it looks so atmospheric. For another couple of camp fires, perhaps some elevated a little bit in the hills/mountains where some cowboys might be camped out before leaving/heading into town... or on the run from the law!
I love that people are taking an interest in the wild west again. It is such an incredible time to look at and model. If you ever want to do a wild west build separate from the town as a stand-alone project try a paddleboat. Those things would be great to try and build.
Your videos are incredible. The fact that you cut them down to only 8 minutes is insane. I would love even more discussion on details involved with the process
I got that old Native Indian Village as a gift for when I was first dry at night as a child. :) Normally we just threw all the LEGO pieces into a box and put all manuals in a folder without using them. But the Indian village was one of those sets we occasionally build according to the manual.
The outlaw is supposed to be from a Build A Minifigure from Q2 2022. It has the Toy Story Jessie hat/hair combo in a recolor and a braid down the back to cover any alternate face.
You should add cowboy camping somewhere in the mountains and add the fireplace lighting there. Just add small tent, horse, some gear, cowboy and the fireplace.
This looks INCREDIBLE!! I gasped when you lit up the teepees and campfire. It looks incredible. Great job as always; even though the lighting in this MOC isn't finished, what little there is right now looks incredible. It really gives the setting more character during the 'night'. Looking forward to more work!!
This was my dream as a kid, so seeing you build this now is the most nostalgic thing ever. Keep up the great work cause im loving watching this journey. ❤
If you've ever been to the American Southwest, the uniform height of sediment layers is very authentic. That's how the mesas in places like Monument Valley actually look.
I love this, you and your brother are such talented builders, never give up because I wanna visit this museum and I'm guessing lots of others will want to visit too!
These building techniques are borderline genius. It looks so detailed and realistic for Lego
Not genius, borderline genius.
Pure Lego autismo, and I’m all here for it.
Absolutely!!
@@randomqrcod.e too many people unnecessarily throw in adjectives before words these days
I think you should add a Sheriff house and Jail because those buildings are in every Weston movie and TV show.
It would be really cool if you added some figures and other stuff inside the tents so the shadows can be seen at night.
thats actually a really good idea
he already did that! (the videos on his German channels are a bit further ahead than his English channel)
I was thinking the same thing!
i was going to comment this! it'd look awesome and you wouldn't even need them to be the native american figures (assuming the tents are never removed for guests to see)
Great idea
This is incredible, very creative and well done. I normally don't like LEGO lighting but this is just phenomenal, I'm in awe, great work!
Hi Chris!
LEGO lighting is can be atmospheric if done right!
Chris u need to build a minifigure world to!
Disassemble this town, go to the USA and build it there for your world tour series :P And more importantly; does it come with a Lego frog?
I would argue that the Lego Group should make lightning options at a far greater extent than they are today. It DOES matter to many models whether or not it lights up. Take most car models as a simple example.
While there are third party solutions available, the cost, replacing pieces and other weird workarounds you need to do to make it work is more off-putting than it needs to be. If the bricks were made for lightning out of the box, I think more people would love it and use it!
Put some minifigures into the tents. Then you have flickering shadows on the canvas.
brillant idea.
(pun intended)
Yes, I love this idea
he did that one his main channel. The videos there are a bit earlier, but in german
I often see builds with special lighting that are rather poorly designed or simply don't hide their LEDs or wiring but here it's so masterfully done that the result really feels immersive. Well done!
Couldnt agree more!
The hat being shot off his head in the duel... So simple, but breathes so much life into the scene
Ready for the bridge that connects the Wild West mock to the city mock
not that it matters literally at all, but they’re called MOCs, standing for “my own creation.”
@@maxrainey7143ah I wondered what moc meant (I knew right spelling but I kept forgetting to look it up)
I would love to see a GBC train traveling over it.
The lights have completely transformed the western town, well done. Do you have plans to add a full day/night cycle to your museum?
It would be wonderful to produce some ambient sounds that play during different times of the day to really push the immersion. Cicadas and birds in the day, crickets and crackling campfires at night.
yo Mogswamp? Didn't expect to see you here
Btw yes he's planning on adding a day night cycle.
Two wonderful builders in different ways crossing paths
yes
Oh, must have missed that one. So pumped to see that!@youtubekilledtrustedflaggi9274
Looks amazing! The lighting really completes the build it looks so natural and beautiful
I know a lot of indigenous tribes in the area would often stay in really cool houses made of reeds and grass more than tps, and might be a good step in leaning away from stereotypes u wete worried about. You can Google native American dwellings in the west and find some. Also bison were rlly common game in these areas, and it would be rlly common to see more wildlife. A wild west town would probably be full of rats or possums. Common for people to have cats to deal with them. And it would be awesome to see a coyote or bobcat standing watch on a canyon.
Don't know if you're already planning to, but putting lights in the train carriage will probably also look awesome at "night".
I love how simple the canyons are. It gives them that nice LEGO charm.
Absolutely no words for all your amazing work. The planning, finding exactly what’s right and of course all the costs… insane! Your videos are the highlight of the week! Much love from the Netherlands! ❤
Maybe a camp fire somewhere on top of a mountain plateau would be nice! You can make the story, group of hunters or maybe bandits plotting to rob the bank or a stage coach
Wow, that is amazing and huuuuge. Tons of LEGO bricks.
Wow! Crazy how just those few lamps outside the buildings set such a mood for the town!
Really awesome! Those teepees definitely took me back! You should place a minifig or two inside to cast shadows though!
I’m amazed! Simply the best western scene ever. I love that you’re adding lights- I think maybe another campfire with a camp up on one of the platforms would draw your eye back and give a lot of depth. Keep it up!
That lone campfire sounds cool.
The little holes you made in the bricks is fine, erasing the back side of the bandit head felt slightly wrong but had good results.
Everything in this scene looks amazing!
As someone with Choctaw heritage, I love the shoutout in the corner! Some people might think it’s stereotyping, but it’s a cool reference to my ancestors ❤️ Love the videos!
If someone were to add a very stereotypical shoutout to the Swiss then I would also be happy.
dude called us indians lol
@@GamesNStuff365I’m not too upset by it, to be honest. Obviously I don’t speak for everyone though
The Indian village was one of the coolest parts! Very cool nod to the native populations!
@@WKJFilms The guy from this channel is a German in Germany. So his native people would be the Germanic tribes of some sorts. As a Swiss I don't know precisely how he thinks, culturally, but if he is anything like I would expect, then his nod wasn't for some cultural reason. Over here in Europa we don't really feel as much of cultural connection or a historical guilt towards the native Americans. We just mostly know about them through wester movies or books like for example Karl May.
I'm pretty sure the nod he is doing is towards one of the classic LEGO sets. After all he highlights it several times, that those are the original LEGO pieces from that set and never once mentions the cultural aspects of the native Americans.
I noticed that you seem to be interested in different cultures and so I wanted to show you how a culture different from your own might see this topic.
A rider with a lantern would be quite a nice touch inside the town, or just outside of it. Love your work my friend!
Only one word: LOVELY!
Even when electricity became fairly common, towns like this would often still have fire-based lighting. It's totally reasonable to have your bank and saloon main lights be electric, but then have some of the small lights inside flickering like a lantern.
I think you can add an old broken wood bridge between two mountains because the back part of the town looks a little bit basic and uncolored if you ask me. Maybe you can do it on top of the river so it looks more realistic and logical. You have a lot of details along the town including the mountains but I think you need something bigger than a detail at the back that will catch attention at first look. Love your videos mate, keep it up.
Wow man, this is some SERIOUS dedication! Awesome!!!!!👏👏👏
This is so Gorgeous! I would ADORE Lego revisiting a proper Wild-West theme! I think with their more modern resources (and care for history, diversity, etc) it would be GREAT. And it would give the CMF figures somewhere to live
the black horse on top of the canyon is a real legend
it has been standing there since the beginning of this series
keep up the great work 👍
OMG! This is absolutely amazing! I'd love to go see it when it is all finished. Maybe in my "once in a lifetime" European trip. Love it!
I’m not an expert on the matter, but I think, historically, tipis were used primarily by nomadic plains dwelling Native Americans who followed bison herds for resources. I would make the ground area under that small section into dried plains grass if something like it was available from Lego. In the southwest desert regions it would be more appropriate to make some small mud brick adobe houses, maybe on the side of the wild west diorama opposite from the tipis, like the town was a meeting place between two First Nations territories.
Overall, the town does look pretty magical, though.
this is some of the best lego work i have ever seen awesome keep it up!!!!
This looks so amazing! It really lends a feeling of life to the entire build. You've put so many hours and so much love into this project, and it really shows!
oh my GASH those lights are so awesome...
The flickering campfire is AMAZING. Its so much fun seeing these MOC builds come together!
Hoolllyyy cow! The campfire lighting inside of the tee-pees is genius. It feels so alive, I completely agree with adding a few more flickering lights throughout the town. The ambiance it adds is unmatched.
The sediment layers should absolutely be at the same height, since that's how it'd actually look with how those plateau get formed
This is the best lighting work I have seen yet. Not too bright, no wires or bulbs exposed, and the flickering fire pit is fantastic.
I have not yet thought about how to illuminate my city but I will certainly take inspiration from him because I plan to make videos even at night in the future
Great job with all the lights, one small suggestion, add some quick disconnects to each building so you don’t have to cut the wire every time you want to work on them and it also lets you make all the wiring in advance and then add it to buildings after. Keep up the great work.
You should add ambient background sound for the different places. So like a windy wild west with horses for example in the Wild West. And then city background noise for the Lego city
the tps can be custom printed you could find actual historical prints and build a L shape wing using the Navajo settlements also you could put cracks in the rocks I know they are Halloween but you could throw random aliens or crypteds in some holes and you could add sediment of minerals and a river with gold to move towards a Aztec Mylan build with heavy jungle maybe a few indy capers or explorer in a heavy jungle
The lighting is awesome it brings so much life to the wild west town, also the flickering fires in the Indian village look amazing the real cherry on the cake. Well done everyone involved!
That flickering LED-s are first in the community. THEY ARE GREAT!!! Please. show us "how to solder yourself" video. Thank you. You are awesome INSPIRING creator. :)
First? Bevin bricks may have that title.
A big rock structure in the foreground, with a tunnel to the native Indians to be hiding from the westerners. Would look really cool! You already have a smaller rock structure behind the tepee. If you continue from that wall then build a large rock attached with a tunnel leading towards the beige path, (where that cowboy is). This would had more height, depth, detail, and story to the entire western theme. Yeehaw
The lights are AMAZING!! Great job with the fire and hiding all the wires :)
Although it may be quite tricky, I think it would look awesome to have a big headlight on the front the train. Just imagine it rolling through the town, lighting up the buildings and foliage as it passes.
In response to everyone making the correction: it's worth noting that many tribes DO specifically refer to themselves as "Indian" or "American Indian". "Native American" is _commonly_ recognized as referring to the First People of North America, but it can also refer to indigenous people of South and Central America. It's also a term many feel is another instance of imposed language/speaking over them, and Indian is the term used by not just the US government in recognizing their sovereignty but by Tribal governments themselves.
I'm mostly just summing up the points of a CGP Grey video on the subject, so it's worth watching that to get a more detailed explanation. But when in doubt about what to call an indigenous group your best bet is always going to be primary sources -- look up how people in the group refer to themselves, check the websites and publications of official governments and institutions of the group, or even just ask members of the group yourself.
More generally speaking, if you don't know their preferred name and can't check, "Indigenous people of [nation/continent name]" has been a safer fallback than "Native [nation/continent resident name]" in my experience.
In response to the video: I've been watching your videos on and off for maybe a couple months now, your work is incredible and this is no exception! Before I'd only seen the Wild West section when it appeared in the coastal city videos, so it being the focus this time was a nice change of pace. I did wince a bit at drilling the holes, but mostly because it seems like really delicate work and you could potentially ruin the connective ability of the studs if you're not careful... but the end result speaks for itself!
I appreciate you specifying that's how the original set was when acknowledging the village looking a bit stereotypical; depending on how much you want to improve on that, it might help to narrow your point of reference down to one or two specific tribes from the Western US that have close-enough parallels to the designs of the minifigures and tepees. Once you have a specific cultural guide to work from, you can fine-tune and expand on the details accordingly.
But yeah. Awesome work, looking forward to the next video, and apologies for the wall of text!
Technically, neither "Indian" nor "Native American" is fully accurate. Indigenous Indians are not from India, and all American-born citizens are native. It is but a matter of time before "Indiana" is cancelled (probably not).
This was well done. I’m not qualified to comment on this and I was looking to see if anyone else had been able to step up. Happy to see you have.
@@LukeMaps”Tribal peoples” is the preferred parlance of said people where I live. I defer to them.
In New Jersey, I was informed that they prefer “American Natives”, this could be different in other states and locations though.
yea but we're tepees used in western US? I thought it was all adobe houses
I love the lights.they are adding so much realism to the build
When I first saw the wild west scene from the Lego movie I instantly wanted to see somebody make one, and I gotta say this came out phenomenal
2:41 - So I live in Utah where this landscape is iconic. The sediment lines are typically at the same heights, maybe a little up and down with some activity but from a distance at a large scale the way you're doing it looks right.
For your Lego city you could use different colour lights like white in some houses and yellow for others like houses in real life have, you could also use colours like purple and red to represent houses that have LEDs in their rooms (like a house I can see from my window that has purple light coming out of their room at night)
There is just something so satisfying about the build colours and design, and the lightning just elevates it to another level. Everything is put together so well
You should add a campfire site in the mountains with a light to illuminate the background and draw the attention there also. It would also be cool to have a small light at a mine/mineshaft. Amazing work!
This brought such a smile to my face. Amazing electrical work! You know it gets serious when a lego builder busts out the soldering iron.
I personally love the rock faces being made out of normal bricks, it just feels so much more authentic to me.
I think leaving the rocks in the mountains like that was a good choice. They look amazing and rough! The entire city is astonishingly detailed and well made!
The lighting looks insane! I really like the Western section
the fire inside the tipi's looks like reflection of the fireplace in the middle. it looks so good !!!
I live out in texas and i love this moc so much! i've been out to the western desert a bit and you've got the terrain right! keep up the great work! this has given me inspiration to go build!
I have a question, since you have been to such a desert. The way he placed the plants is equidistant and quite common. Shouldn't they be more sparse and clustered?
@@benrex7775 a little but it's still shockingly accurate for lego
@@highoncatnip_ Thanks for the reply.
Absoloute sacrilege, erasing a minifigure's face, thats Lord Buisness levels of evil.
Great video ; )
😍
I was not expecting to see you here
It would be a really fun detail to add some more specific details on the indigenous tribe, every tribe's characteristics depends on the land they live on, and the tipis were more for plains environments. "Hogans" were mostly used in like western looking areas which were basically dirt, wood and stone huts. Also maybe you could do something cool with making a sweatlodge too!
You can go just a state or province away and the cultures are completely unique to one another
This is BY FAR the best western moc I have ever seen. Amazing job with everything. Although lights for Lego's are a pain to deal with and I don't have the patients for it, you guys did a superb job. Man, you make everything I want to do look like an amateur. Back to the drawing board for me. lol! A+++++
if you haven't yet, you could add a sniper on post, maybe could be a sherif or smt, even aiming after the bandita 4:03🙂
This is a masterpiece, this gotta be every little kids Lego Dream 😭 I love the use of LEDS i love watching this all come together keep it up! ❤
The lighting adds a whole other level of detail to these scenes. Some very ingenius methods of running the wiring too! I'd love to know how the lighting is going to be controlled as part of the day/night cycle.
I think you should add a few mini figs in the tps, they would cast shadows and I think it would be really cool
Wonderful eraser trick with yhe dual print minifig head! Im glad that that 2x2 wanted printed tiles found some use to for an easy mini-story and scavanger hunt for your guests to explore the display for. Keep up the amazing work!
You could add an oil field somewhere in the corner. It would look awesome with the LED fire on top of the oil rigs.
Absolutely FANTASTIC, AMAZING, BRILLIANT, GENIOUS. You are by far the most talented LEGO TH-camr I watch. You are an inspiration. Keep up the great work.
The lighting is extremely good looking! I have just a small suggestion and i dont know how difficult it is to do, but i think it would look slightly more realistic if the flikkering of the fires would slightly off set between the different tipi's and the campfire. Because now it looks slightly unnatural because every fire flickers at the exact same time. Still the whole build looks extremely good and is insanely impressive keep it up!
love the build but as a historian a few notes:
-Tipis existed in the plains and were used mainly by the Sioux and Pawnee tribes, you wouldn't really find them in a desert climate.
-The term native Americans or native peoples is usually a better term to use than "indian"
-in the desert you would find tribes like the Yoeme peoples and the Pascua Yaqui peoples. They typically would build huts and small wooden shelters/houses rather than tipis.
Love the build btw and big fan of your work! This comment isnt meant to criticize rather to inform :D
Thanks for sharing, I think this should all be taken on board.
In Germany, "Indian" is still quite often said to Native American. He probably really wasn't aware of that.
@@Test-ur9tg Could be, but if so, this is an opportunity to learn and remedy the matter.
@@primitiveairraid There is certainly a lesson to be learned from this. But it will still be a longer process, because in Germany even the official Wikipedia entry for the native people is still "Idianer". Basically, this designation is used by everyone. The well-known German dictionary Duden has at least added "discriminatory" to the word in recent years. You don't get that out of the language use so fast. Especially older people often resist such changes. It's just always been that way, we grew up with it," is the response one sometimes gets.
my god, this is absolutely insane. your dedication and passion to the craft is extremely admirable and the final product is so aesthetically pleasing, thank you for creating these and showcasing it on youtube for all to see!
Praise His Holy Name.
Hey! Amazing video as always. Small note, “Native American” is the modern verbiage for “American Indian” in the US. You can also use “indigenous” which has come into fashion in recent years. Indian was a misnomer given by Columbus who thought he landed in the Indies (modern day Indonesia). Wanted to drop a note incase you’re doing any plaques or signage. Keep up the good work!
Thank u
An interesting video to watch on this topic is CGP Grey's
So much tedious work but I assure you it's _so_ worth it! The effect is beautiful and atmospheric, well done!
While "Indian" is a term commonly used in the United States to describe certain Indigenous peoples, and while "Indian" is a term used in legislation and legal terms in Canada, "Indian" is also a historically incorrect and racist term applied to Indigenous peoples. Calling an Indigenous person or group "Indian" can have the same impact as calling an Indian person (an actual Indian) "p__i", or Jew "k__e", for instance. If you are looking to adapt an old Lego set to your new and thoughtfully custom-designed Lego world, then perhaps you could also invest an effort into updating the "cowboys & Indians" trope to reflect an informed portrayal of Indigenous peoples, including a reflection of Indigenous peoples not being a homogenous group or possessing a monoculture portrayed in non-Indigenous popular culture and/or early anthropological accounts serving the global project of colonization. It could make for a fun, challenging, and educational project.
I second this
A rather wordy explanation, but I agree. The term is so last century, and felt awkward, even to me, born in the 1950s. "Native American", perhaps...?
Best production, professionalism and creativity from any Lego channel today!
Absolutely brilliant. Awesome work with the lights. The flickering fires with the classic tepee set just made my day.
Simply amazing - it looks so atmospheric. For another couple of camp fires, perhaps some elevated a little bit in the hills/mountains where some cowboys might be camped out before leaving/heading into town... or on the run from the law!
I love that people are taking an interest in the wild west again. It is such an incredible time to look at and model. If you ever want to do a wild west build separate from the town as a stand-alone project try a paddleboat. Those things would be great to try and build.
Absolutely, utterly, freaking amazing work. Simply gorgeous!
Just the small touches of the lights are awesome. You guys have put in so much work, it looks so cool!
Absolutely beautiful!
I'd easily watch an hour of these creations. The lighting adds mood and liveliness to the town.
Your videos are incredible. The fact that you cut them down to only 8 minutes is insane. I would love even more discussion on details involved with the process
I got that old Native Indian Village as a gift for when I was first dry at night as a child. :)
Normally we just threw all the LEGO pieces into a box and put all manuals in a folder without using them. But the Indian village was one of those sets we occasionally build according to the manual.
Dangg preserved lego pieces from 1999🙏🏼😇🩶✨
I love the lights! You should add some minifigs inside the tent to have a shadow on the fabric!
The outlaw is supposed to be from a Build A Minifigure from Q2 2022. It has the Toy Story Jessie hat/hair combo in a recolor and a braid down the back to cover any alternate face.
Those fires in particular are so incredible! What wonderful work, thank you for sharing ❤
"it looks even more realistic than actual fire" no truer words have been said. incredible work.
This is absolutely incredible! The night time shots with the LEDs is brilliant!
You should add cowboy camping somewhere in the mountains and add the fireplace lighting there. Just add small tent, horse, some gear, cowboy and the fireplace.
This looks INCREDIBLE!! I gasped when you lit up the teepees and campfire. It looks incredible. Great job as always; even though the lighting in this MOC isn't finished, what little there is right now looks incredible. It really gives the setting more character during the 'night'. Looking forward to more work!!
Just lovely, well done. The bright green cactus seem un-natural.
This was my dream as a kid, so seeing you build this now is the most nostalgic thing ever. Keep up the great work cause im loving watching this journey. ❤
You really do the most beautiful Lego layouts I've ever seen. ❤
If you've ever been to the American Southwest, the uniform height of sediment layers is very authentic. That's how the mesas in places like Monument Valley actually look.
I love this, you and your brother are such talented builders, never give up because I wanna visit this museum and I'm guessing lots of others will want to visit too!
I mean the lights are such a bothersome tasks, but the result is jawdropping! Thank you for the extra work!
I wasn't expecting the lighting to look so good! Truly amazing work.
The work on the lights is so satisfying, crazy amount of time to build your own lego world, love seeing you pushing your creativity : )