![]() ![]() The back of the box showcases the set’s working functions, which we’ll cover in much more detail later in this review. The set’s 2,646 parts come packaged in a slick box that emphasizes the Nintendo Entertainment System name rather than LEGO’s own branding, in line with LEGO’s new adult product strategy and branding announced earlier this year. ![]() Does this marriage of my favorite little plastic bricks with the big plastic brick of my dreams live up to 35 years of pent-up expectations? Let’s find out… Now, I can buy my own ( US $229.99 | CAN $299.99 | UK £209.99) and build it for myself from LEGO, which seems even better. As I went over to my friends’ houses and played Super Mario and the very first Legend of Zelda, I so very desperately wanted one! But I never did, partly because I was told that I had enough toys in the form of all the LEGO underfoot in my bedroom. After all, it felt like nearly every one of my friends in the neighborhood in Japan where I lived had a Famicom, or later the true NES launched in 1985. It’s important to understand as you read this review of the new LEGO 71374 Nintendo Entertainment System that I never owned an NES myself as a kid back in the 80’s. ![]()
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