LEGO Scooby-Doo Mystery Plane Compared to the Cobi Wing Walking Plane Toy Review

2016-03-05 19

LEGO Scooby-Doo Mystery Plane Compared to the Cobi Wing Walking Plane Toy Review\r
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Its a head to head competition, and LEGO does not come out on top. \r
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LEGO Scooby-Doo 75901 Mystery Plane Adventures Building Kit\r
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Includes a horse and Headless Horsemans sword\r
Accessory elements include Headless Horsemans pumpkin head (new for fall 2015) and cape, special brick with a mystery clue and a golden cup\r
Scooby-Doo comes with flight goggles decoration; drop hamburger bombs from the plane\r
Swing down from the plane on the chain with Shaggy; unmask the Headless Horseman\r
Mystery Plane measures over 2 (6cm) high, 6 (17cm) long and 6 (16cm) wide\r
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Scooby DOO /23250/ Wing Walking Scooby Set 229 Building Bricks By Cobi\r
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The COBI is a Polish manufacturer of high quality construction blocks which is fully compatible with Lego but offers wider choice and cheaper prices in construction bricks. COBI construction blocks are not just attractively designed and safe, but also carry educational meaning, develop childrens imagination, creative thinking, perceptiveness and manual skills.\r
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Learn more about Scooby-Doo here at the Scooby-Doo homepage:\r
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Scooby-Doo homepage:\r
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Learn more about Scooby Doo here:\r
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Scooby-Doo is an American animated cartoon franchise, comprising several animated television series produced from 1969 to the present day. The original series, Scooby-Doo, Where Are You!, was created for Hanna-Barbera Productions by writers Joe Ruby and Ken Spears in 1969. This Saturday-morning cartoon series featured four teenagers—Fred Jones, Daphne Blake, Velma Dinkley, and Norville Shaggy Rogers—and their talking brown Great Dane[1] named Scooby-Doo, who solve mysteries involving supposedly supernatural creatures through a series of antics and missteps.\r
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LEGO clones or Knockoffs\r
This quote from Wikipedia addresses the rights for other companies to produce LEGO-like bricks, but does not address whether LEGO actually had the right to patent them in the first place:\r
At least two of the largest clone manufacturers have been challenged in court by Lego. The lawsuits have been mostly unsuccessful, as courts have generally found the functional design of the basic brick to be a matter of patent rather than trademark law, and all relevant Lego patents have expired.\r
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The original plastic brick:\r
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The (non-wooden) predecessor to the plastic brick:\r
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