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  • LEGO’s ‘Smart Brick’ Gives Its Plastic Bricks the Power to See, Hear and Feel

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    A presentation during the LEGO SMART Play launch event at Mandalay Bay Convention Center on Jan. 05, 2026 in Las Vegas, Nevada. David Becker/Getty Images for The LEGO Group

    LEGO just made its most ambitious showing ever at CES, the world’s largest consumer electronics trade show—an unusual venue for a toy giant, and a telling one. At this year’s CES in Las Vegas, LEGO unveiled a screen-less device called the “SMART Brick,” a bid to bring a myriad of senses to its silent, incredibly precise plastic bricks.

    The SMART Brick is a standard two-by-four LEGO brick (1.6 cm by 3.2 cm) with a tiny, custom ASIC chip embedded inside. That chip allows the brick to recognize distance, color and motion, and even to interpret the “personalities” of thousands of LEGO minifigures.

    The brick sits at the center of LEGO’s new “SMART Play” system, a platform designed to make physical play more interactive and fun. It’s meant to be a system “where technology seamlessly brings LEGO sets to life, responding to actions with appropriate sounds and behaviours, allowing for a truly responsive play experience,” according to LEGO. The Danish company is billing SMART Play as its most significant product innovation in 50 years, since the introduction of the minifigure in the late 1970s.

    The SMART Brick, small enough to be integrated in any LEGO model, packs in far more than its size suggests. It includes responsive lights, a color-recognition scanner to sense its surroundings, a sound synthesizer capable of producing a wide range of effects, and a built-in accelerometer that tracks how the brick moves through the air in real-time.

    A LEGO SMART brickA LEGO SMART brick

    The SMART brick works in conjunction with SMART tags and SMART minifigures. A SMART Tag is a flat, 2×2 studless tile embedded with a unique digital ID that tells a nearby SMART Brick what role it should assume in a given context. SMART minifigures, without a visible tag, also contain their own unique digital IDs that encode a character’s “personality” and guide how the SMART Brick should behave when that figure is nearby.

    During a demo at CES, Tom Donaldson, senior vice president and head of Creative Play Lab at the LEGO Group, placed a SMART Brick on a panel divided into four colors: red, green, blue and yellow. As the brick moved across the surface, it lit up to match the color beneath it.

    “When you put that in a LEGO model, the model knows the world around it,” Donaldson said. “It knows it’s in a water bayou; it knows it’s in a jungle bayou because it’s green; maybe it knows it’s in a red fire engine over a blue police car.”

    In another demonstration, Donaldson attached a SMART Brick to a LEGO yellow duck and moved it through different positions—splashing, sleeping, even flying to test whether the duck approved. The brick responded with sounds that conveyed different emotions: contentment, snoring, irritation and more.

    The SMART Brick can also sense proximity. When another brick moves closer or farther away, it reacts by changing its lights or emitting sounds. When placed on or near a SMART Tag, it instantly assumes whatever role the tag assigns it—a police car, a duck, a helicopter and so on.

    SMART minifigures, meanwhile, react uniquely to their environments through distinct sounds, moods and behaviors. Those reactions are played through the speaker inside a nearby SMART Brick; the minifigures themselves don’t produce sound, but instead trigger the brick to do so on their behalf.

    LEGO SMART Play is set to officially launch on March 1. Preorders for an all-in-one LEGO Star Wars SMART Play set begin on Jan. 9.

    LEGO’s ‘Smart Brick’ Gives Its Plastic Bricks the Power to See, Hear and Feel

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    Sissi Cao

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  • The Best Holiday Gifts for the Art Lovers and Artists On Your List

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    When it comes to gifts for art lovers, wrapping original art is the ultimate power move. But here’s the catch: collectors pour their hearts—and usually their bank accounts—into curating deeply personal collections. If you know your giftee very, very well, a piece of art can be a very, very good gift. You could also treat the collector in your life to a gallery outing or surprise them with a session with an art advisor. But if adding to their collection feels too ambitious, there are plenty of artsy presents for everyone on your list, from the absolute obsessive to the casually cultured. Whether you’re working with a shoestring budget or aiming for extravagance, there’s no shortage of options that are thoughtful, stylish and primed to impress. Enjoy our guide to the gifts guaranteed to thrill any art enthusiast.

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    Christa Terry

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  • LEGO Store Opens at Atlanta’s Perimeter Mall

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    The 2,153-square-foot store features interactive experiences, exclusive products, and hands-on play opportunities designed to appeal to builders of all ages. Photo by Noah Washington/The Atlanta Voice

    Both the young and the young at heart showed up to Perimeter Mall in Dunwoody on Friday as the LEGO Group opened its newest retail location, marking the 119th LEGO store in the United States.

    Michael Stanton, the store manager who previously managed the Birmingham, Alabama, location for 16 years, said the opening represents a homecoming.

    “I grew up here and graduated from Marietta High School, way back in the day,” Stanton said. “What’s so fun about working for the LEGO Group is you come to work every day and you play. I mean, we play in the store with the little ones.  We play with the big ones, with the vending machine. It’s like not working. It’s like being paid to come play every day.”

    The 2,153-square-foot store features interactive experiences, exclusive products, and hands-on play opportunities designed to appeal to builders of all ages. A ribbon-cutting ceremony at 11 a.m. kicked off the grand opening celebration.

    Monica Lewis, 41, (above) deciding which set she wanted to buy. Photo by Noah Washington/The Atlanta Voice

    The store includes permanent fixtures such as the Pick & Build Wall, Build a Minifigure station and Play Tables. Customers can also participate in a mystery mural LEGO brick building activity and view displays from local LEGO Users Groups.

    The construction team worked for about 10 weeks to prepare the space, with store staff spending nine days setting up before the opening, according to Stanton.

    Stanton said he was particularly moved by opening day’s turnout.

    “I get welled up with pride with seeing how many happy families come in,” he said. “It’s one of my favorite things to do, is just talk to families and people who are building with their kids.”

    Opening weekend promotions include exclusive tile giveaways and special sets for LEGO Insiders loyalty program members who make qualifying purchases. The store offers the largest range of LEGO products available, including many exclusives.

    Mike Moore, 46, (above) with a Transformer LEGO set. Photo by Noah Washington/The Atlanta Voice

    Adult fans comprised a significant portion of opening day customers. Mike Moore, an IT professional from Atlanta, said he became seriously interested in LEGO building only recently.

    “I probably really only got hardcore a couple years ago, but I really enjoy it,” Moore said. “I’ve got a tech background, and I find it really peaceful putting something together and seeing the end result. The Technic series, which usually have mechanisms and moving parts, I just find really relaxing.”

    Moore said he heard about the grand opening only days before and felt he “had to be there.” He purchased a Soundwave set, saying, “I’m a kid of the 80s and 90s, so going back to the transformers was a must.”

    Monica Lewis, a flight attendant who began collecting LEGO sets in April, said she enjoys the hobby’s calming effects.

    “I am an adult fan of Lego,” Lewis said. “I just started collecting and building this year in April. It’s a very peaceful hobby.”

    Lewis said she has started sharing her passion with friends through building sessions, including getting matching botanical sets with her best friend in New Jersey for what she called “Lego and liquor” nights.

    The store targets both children and adults, with sections specifically designed for adult builders. Stanton noted the company has emphasized adult fans for about six or seven years, creating “larger, more challenging builds that are more fun” while also offering sets designed for families to build together.

    The company also spotlights female builders through its “She Built That” campaign, which showcases brightly colored, intricately designed sets created to inspire girls and women.

    The LEGO Group, founded in Denmark in 1932, takes its name from the Danish phrase meaning “play well.” The company’s products are sold in more than 140 countries worldwide.

    Stanton reflected on why he chose to work for the company: 

    “When you translate the word Lego from Danish into English, it translates as play well. And what better place to work than a company whose name is play well?”

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    Noah Washington

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  • LEGO breaks gender stereotypes and encourages girls to ‘Play Unstoppable’

    LEGO breaks gender stereotypes and encourages girls to ‘Play Unstoppable’

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    The LEGO Group is proud to launch ‘Play Unstoppable’ in the Philippines, a campaign geared towards inspiring girls to explore and express their creativity without limits. This follows the research commissioned by the toy company revealing that while girls feel increasingly confident to engage in all types of play, they remain held back by society’s ingrained gender stereotypes.

    According to the findings, three-quarters (76%) of young girls feel confident in their creativity. However, this declines as they get older with two-thirds reporting they often feel worried about sharing their ideas. This is compounded by the pressure of perfectionism and anxiety about making mistakes (72%). Even parents agree — 71 percent say girls are more likely to hold back developing their ideas, because of these pressures.

    In a mission to break these barriers, the LEGO Group is hosting a series of creativity caravans around Metro Manila throughout the whole month. Girls ages 4 to 15 can participate in immersive play experiences and take home a free brick set at select store locations below:

    • Toy Kingdom Megamall: March 9-10, 2024
    • Toy Express Makati: March 9-10, 2024
    • Toy Kingdom Southmall: March 16-17, 2024
    • LEGO Certified Store Alabang Town Center: March 16, 2024
    • LEGO Certified Store UP Town Center: March 16-17, 2024
    • LEGO Certified Store BGC: March 23-24, 2024
    • Toy Kingdom Bacoor: March 23-24, 2024
    • Toy Kingdom Podium: March 23-24, 2023
    • Toy Kingdom Mall of Asia: March 30-31, 2024
    • Toy Express Megamall: March 30-31, 2024
    • Toys R Us BGC: March 9-10, 2024
    • Toys R Us Glorietta: March 16-17, 2024
    • Toys R Us TriNoMa: March 23-24, 2024
    • LEGO Certified Store Shangri-La: March 30-31, 2024
    • Toys R Us Greenbelt: March 30-31, 2024

    Upon arrival, kids can register at the on-site area to receive a free LEGO Polybag set, which they can build at the activity area and take home for free. What’s more is that no purchase is necessary to participate. A wide range of LEGO themes are available in store so girls can build and play without limits:

    Get your hands on these sets today and enjoy up to 20% off select products! Drop by your nearest LEGO Certified Store (Alabang Town Center, BGC, TriNoma, Shangri-La Plaza, UP Town Center) now! You may also visit all leading toy stores near you or through official LEGO stores online such as bankeebricks.ph, Lazada, and Shopee.

    To learn more about the LEGO Group, check out lego.com

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    Gadgets Magazine 17

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  • How toy and game companies are winning back their grown-up former customers | CNN Business

    How toy and game companies are winning back their grown-up former customers | CNN Business

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    New York
    CNN
     — 

    I was on vacation and hanging out quietly in the hotel room with my friend when, out of nowhere, she screamed “Zoo Pals are back!”

    We immediately tried to buy some. But to our misfortune, they were sold out. For days we refreshed the page to see if they were back in stock. Sure enough, I got my Zoo Pals a few weeks later.

    I’m almost embarrassed to share that Zoo Pals are paper plates that feature the bright, adorable faces of animals like pigs, turtles, ducks and whales. Each plate has one main section and two subsections for the animal’s ears or feet. In 2014, Hefty, the maker of Zoo Pals, discontinued them.

    As a child, Zoo Pals were a game-changer. That meant broccoli didn’t have to, God forbid, touch my chicken nuggets, and they also provided a special area for dipping the nuggets in ketchup. And I had an incentive to finish my plate so I could see my Zoo Pal’s face again.

    As an adult, I no longer have such needs. But $6.99 was a small price to pay for a walk down memory lane.

    Adults are increasingly shelling out for relics of their youth and for items, ranging from flip phones to film cameras to Tamagotchis, that evoke a late 20th-century or turn-of-the century nostalgia. That demand has created a treasure-trove of sales in particular for toys and products, like my Zoo Pals, originally geared to children.

    Toy recipients ages 18 and up — also known as “kidults” — represented about 17% of total toy sales in the United States for the 12 months ending in June 2023, according to data consumer research group Circana shared with CNN. That’s up four percentage points from 2021 and up a whopping eight percentage points from 2019.

    In total, toy sales for adults increased by $1.7 billion to $6.4 billion from June 2021 to June 2023, according to Circana data.

    The trend of adults buying toys for themselves is relatively new, but longing for the glory days of childhood is not. So how come adults lately have been willing to spend so much money on toys to relive the past?

    The pandemic drove more people to revisit their youth

    Adults started purchasing more toys for themselves after the pandemic began. Covid ushered in heightened levels of anxiety and it caused people to think about dying more, explains Krystine Batcho, a licensed psychologist who teaches at Le Moyne College in Syracuse, New York.

    Both factors are associated with “greater nostalgia,” said Batcho, whose research focuses on the psychology of nostalgia. Batcho created the Nostalgia Inventory, a survey that’s been widely used to assess what makes someone more inclined to feel nostalgic.

    For instance, her research and other research she’s studied point to millenials and members of Gen Z being in life stages that are prime for feeling nostalgic. “The transition away from childhood and adolescence to adulthood entails a bittersweet conflict between the desire to grow into independence and the desire for the carefree innocence and security of childhood,” she said.

    And, in general, people become more nostalgic during difficult times and in threatening circumstances, Batcho added.

    During the pandemic, as people were looking for ways to entertain themselves at home or in small groups they turned to social media for ideas, Juli Lennett, Circana’s toy industry advisor, told CNN. That helped fuel an increase in purchases for games, puzzles, collectibles, trading cards, building sets and more, she said.

    “Consumers found like-minded toy consumers and tribes formed around certain toy categories and brands. It continues to this day,” Lennett said.

    In 2021, Lego launched an entire product line designed for adults that can be found under the “Adults Welcome” section of its site. “In a world of distractions, LEGO Sets for Adults offer a focused, hands-on, mindful activity. A creative recharge. A zone of zen. A place to find your flow,” a post on Lego’s site states.

    A growing share of adults are buying toys for themselves.

    Mattel Inc.’s American Girl doll line has also seen an influx of purchases made by kidults over the past few years, “and it continues to grow in popularity,” Jamie Cygielman, the president of American Girl, told CNN.

    That started to take off in 2021 when American Girl re-released six of the original dolls the company had produced to celebrate its 35th anniversary. The dolls, priced at $150, began to sell out the first day they were listed online, said Cygielman. More than half of those purchases “were women purchasing for themselves, not for a child,” she said based on a subsequent survey American Girl conducted.

    American Girl first started selling alcohol at its first retail store café in Chicago in 1998. Now all nine of its cafés either have full liquor licenses or serve beer and wine, making it a popular destination for Gen Z and millennial customers to celebrate bachelorettes and birthdays, often with their dolls.

    “So we started really leaning into it a bit more,” she said. That meant re-releasing more dolls and doll outfits adults grew up with as well as adding more alcoholic beverages and food items that appeal to adults to its in-store café menus.

    “Any given day as you walk into our café, you’ll see tables of young adults with not a child in sight,” said Cygielman. Many of them come there to celebrate birthdays and bachelorette parties, often with their dolls sitting in clip-on chairs beside them.

    Most recently, American Girl re-released two doll outfits that were originally sold in 1999.

    TikTokers and Instagramers had a field day seeing those and rushed to post about it.

    Since American Girl creates individual stories featuring historical eras like the Colonial period or World War II to complement the dolls they sell, users on social media started posting things like, “We need an American Girl doll who went to college in 2016.”

    The TikTok account that posted that request, @inbloombyemily, received nearly 200,000 likes on her video where she described the doll’s story and curated outfits and accessories which included a Svedka bottle of strawberry lemonade vodka.

    In February, American Girl rereleased the two outfits on the dolls pictured in the middle that were originally sold in 1999. It's part of the company's efforts to attract more nostalgic adults to make purchases for themselves.

    American Girl hasn’t seized the opportunity to actually make most of the dolls the memes capture, said Cygielman.

    “It’s a sincere form of flattery, but we don’t necessarily want to author it ourselves,” she said. “We’re still laser-focused on our core customer, which is that young girl and her caregiver gift giver.”

    As for the kidult trend, there are some signs that it could slow, Lennett said.

    “As consumers have less money in their wallets due to macroeconomic conditions, they are spending less on discretionary categories like toys,” she said. “If the conditions continue, we can expect a pullback in toy spending for adults.”

    But Batcho, the psychologist, notes that nostalgia can be healthy in hard times.

    “Nostalgic memories remind people of better times and can encourage them to seek solutions and move toward a more optimistic future,” she said. “Nostalgia has also been found to increase a sense of meaning and purpose in life. By strengthening social connectedness and feelings of belonging, nostalgia counteracts loneliness.”

    Even though the darkest days of the pandemic are, for the most part, in the rearview mirror there’s still “a nostalgic longing for the security and stability of pre-pandemic life,” Batcho said.

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