>>6175463Thanks to you guys, I finally got the model representing Defender from the World Builder game tracked and snatched up (though I was dumb and bought it out of Amazon where they marked it up x4 the Bricklink price), and found some funny curiosities:
>The World Builder model has the blue panels on the legs facing outwards where the instruction manual has them inwards.>The physical model has these ugly hinge cylinders that don't connect to anything while the World Builder model replaces this particular aspect with 1x2 blue bricks. Conspicuously, set 4099 lacks these bricks entirely.>The instruction manual is inconsistent on the exact makeup of the Defender's foot base: the finished design shows two 1x2 1/3rders helping stabilize the feet (seen installed in this picture), but neither the world builder render contains them nor the instructions ever state to place these.>The Defender's companion model has no instructions at all and I had to use all the images, including the one on the back of the box to properly build it as each obscures a specific angle. I think the feet are supposed to have orange 1/3s to fill in the hollow space of the ramps as they and blue are the only matching pairs of blocks remaining when built, but it's impossible to tell since no image shows their inside.>The eyes are opaque, and not transparent orange like I assumed they would be.Now, anybody know of a set you can find in a market that has two 2x1 blue blocks that I can obtain without having to buy a whole tub? I just got back into Lego after several years and most of the old stuff was cleared out a long time ago. The Ewok and Orient Express fellow in the jumpsuit (the result of putting the first head I could find on the first complete body I had on hand) piloting the mech I made out of the remaining Robobot parts are all that's left from that period, banana and goth man being blind-bag impulse purchases.
Again, thanks for pointing me the right way, Lego General!