Hornby is quite brave to take this plunge. Can’t say it is terribly cute, the way Thomas thrilled everyone
(butnot me, I’m more of a Nessie guy). This reminds me of Lionel’s pink and pastel girl’s train set of
the 1950’s, and it was a terrible bust. People who enjoy the Steam Punk ethic will spend disposable
income upon costumes and accessories to see and be seen, not on a private collection of steam punk
trains.
All that dressing up seems a bit ‘out there’ and attention seeking. However, each to their own and if it gets more people interested in the hobby then it’s a good thing. They may then move to the more traditional side of the hobby.
Bandit Mick wrote: ↑Thu Sep 24, 2020 8:10 am
It’s a bit like rap ‘music’ - I just don’t get it. Must be my age or something.
Ah, rap music. I suppose one has to thank the USA for that musical virus. Whilst serving with Brown Bess,
I received a daily blast of rap, shortly after reveille, that has left permanent brain damage.
I love the creativity of it, but I wonder if Hornby would have captured the idea better if they sold the locos as basic body shapes void of any detail and sell various seperate detailing packs to allow the individual to build up themselves their own customized locomotive, rolling stock and buildings etc.
Of course, younger children will need one piece ready made loco bodies but older children and adults would be much better served if they can buy a cheap budget loco stripped of all detail in which they could then start to build up the way they want it.
I have seen a cog detailing pack, but somehow they need a bit more. I like the idea very much though and I do get it. The costumes people make. What I don't get is people putting goggles on a hat and thinking they are steampunk. (In other words they have put no thought in other then to "Copy" where the whole concept is that one does not copy but does something unique and inventive).