You got your LEGO in my cube!

January 20, 2023 at 10:00 PM (UTC)

While hunting for white elephant gifts, I came across something really neat.

A company called ULUZE (what is with the myriad company name concotions from online sellers?) makes a combination 3x3 cube and LEGO knockoff I had to get for myself.

ULUZE's Magic Cube, a 3x3 Rubik's-like cube with LEGO-knockoff 2x2 plates for faces.
It's been rearranged so the faces are in checkboard patterns.

Okay, so, this thing is really neat.

First, I wouldn't mistake it for a speedcube. (I have a couple of those already, both "smart"—the first one I got, Particula's GoCube and another I picked up to compare, the GAN356 i 3. The former taught me, finally, how to solve this puzzle.)

But you know, it turns rather well. I also fairly recently got fulfillment on Pride Knights' LGBTQube. These are for display (I can't imagine trying to solve them), but also, they're real Rubik's Cubes and they turn like đź’©.

The Magic Cube doesn't have any real kind of corner cutting, owing to the fact that everything is very square-edged with some tiny curves to the corners. But it also doesn't really get stuck, either. My partner scrambled it and I was able to re-solve it in just a few minutes—and that was while looking at the GoCube app again because I've forgotten how to do even a beginner solve.

The other thing is that these knockoff LEGO plates aren't bad. They all snapped on firmly but without killing my fingers, and I can sit a minifig on them with no trouble.

They also included a spare for each side, which is really nice. And there's also a knockoff Brick Separator that is quite good at taking the plates off the cube sides.

Insert joke about how this is designed for sticker-peelers (people who "solve" their Rubik's Cubes by peeling the stickers off and reapplying them elsewhere), but this is a really fun little thing. It's gonna mostly be for display—I'll stick to my speedcubes for practice—but it's good quality and was definitely worth the ~$12 I paid for it.