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<blockquote data-quote="Dire Bare" data-source="post: 9294746" data-attributes="member: 18182"><p>For some folks, sure.</p><p></p><p>But for LEGO nerds, the "sets" are very much maintained.</p><p></p><p>My brother not only kept all of the LEGO pieces he played with as a kid, but he kept all of the instructions for the sets and would often bag special pieces so they wouldn't get lost in the mix. Granted, my Dad encouraged that behavior, but my brother took to it readily enough.</p><p></p><p>Now my brother is old, like me, and has passed his LEGO collection on to his son, who is similarly inclined. They continue to purchase new LEGO sets to construct and play with together. And they keep it all organized, and they have a LOT of LEGOs . . . .</p><p></p><p>And my brother isn't alone in how he's maintained his childhood collection. Although I'm sure for most kids and families, everything just goes in a big box once the initial build has lost its luster.</p><p></p><p>And even when kids/families don't maintain "set integrity" . . . those blocks still hold a lot of play value. For me, I didn't keep instructions like my brother, but I did bag special pieces and had different buckets for different LEGO themes, such as Space and Castle. So, as a kid, when I wanted to build new spaceships or moon bases, all of the appropriate pieces were in the same bucket, even if I lost the original instructions. I didn't keep my LEGOS however, I wish I had so I could have passed them on to my nephew.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Dire Bare, post: 9294746, member: 18182"] For some folks, sure. But for LEGO nerds, the "sets" are very much maintained. My brother not only kept all of the LEGO pieces he played with as a kid, but he kept all of the instructions for the sets and would often bag special pieces so they wouldn't get lost in the mix. Granted, my Dad encouraged that behavior, but my brother took to it readily enough. Now my brother is old, like me, and has passed his LEGO collection on to his son, who is similarly inclined. They continue to purchase new LEGO sets to construct and play with together. And they keep it all organized, and they have a LOT of LEGOs . . . . And my brother isn't alone in how he's maintained his childhood collection. Although I'm sure for most kids and families, everything just goes in a big box once the initial build has lost its luster. And even when kids/families don't maintain "set integrity" . . . those blocks still hold a lot of play value. For me, I didn't keep instructions like my brother, but I did bag special pieces and had different buckets for different LEGO themes, such as Space and Castle. So, as a kid, when I wanted to build new spaceships or moon bases, all of the appropriate pieces were in the same bucket, even if I lost the original instructions. I didn't keep my LEGOS however, I wish I had so I could have passed them on to my nephew. [/QUOTE]
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