>>8331657>>8331652I still like both.
I don't agree that videogaems have no sense of accomplishment or even lack of creativity. But Creativity having a physical object at the end is more satisfying.
Basically Lego: allows me to live in the nostalgia of the bricks and pieces, design stuff and try to make it work IRL so it's stable and fun to handle with your hands and have characters i enjoy. but expensive
Videogames: fragging some guy out of the air with a rocketlauncher while moving around at mach 5 speed giving you a very 'embodied' experience that Lego bricks don't give me. (Not dissing any anons that like to go pew pew realtime playing with toys, i did that a lot as a kids but nobody to share that with anymore. and my headcanon is too specific or film inspired to make sense. I'm glad I had the pew pew kids play experience as a kid.)
pic related, mata nui farting on his firesword within a videogame