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My Lego sets have better environmental storytelling than most video games I've played this year

Bricktacular, bricktacular

A set of modular Lego buildings clipped together: a bookshop next to a blue and white townhouse, next to a thin purple donut shop, next to a large police station
Image credit: Rock Paper Shotgun/LEGO

I like small things - models, and what not - but I'm not patient enough to build them from scratch myself. Lego sets represent an ideal, if monstrously expensive, solution. I can build the thing without having to make all the constituent parts of it. I've recently gotten well into the modular city sets, to the extent that I look up discontinued sets on eBay and other such secondhand vendors. I don't actually get sets very often, but last week I built a police station, which can slot next to the bookshop I got for my last birthday. And while the bookshop has cute details - like a book called Moby Brick with a white block leaping from the sea on the cover, and an attic flat with a pet iguana in a glass tank - the copshop has some secret secrets that are the Lego equivalent of leaving a skeleton in a toilet stall. But better.

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