• 'I dont think we can call ourselves a toy anymore because were an

    From TechnologyDaily@954:895/2 to All on Sat Jan 10 00:45:08 2026
    'I dont think we can call ourselves a toy anymore because were an iconic experience company' Lego on how Smart Bricks expand the system and how 'this just adds a new dimension'

    Date:
    Sat, 10 Jan 2026 00:30:00 +0000

    Description:
    After eight years in development, Legos Smart Play system brings custom silicon, sensing, and responsiveness to a familiar form: the Smart Brick. To unpack what that means for the future of physical play, TechRadar spoke with Julia Goldin, Legos Chief Product & Marketing Officer, and Tom Donaldson,
    Head of the Creative Play Lab, at CES 2026.

    FULL STORY ======================================================================

    Heading into CES 2026 , Lego teased that it would be hosting a keynote but now that the dust has settled, its clear the company used the stage to unveil its biggest change to the Lego brick since its modern design debuted in 1958.

    The new Smart Play system, and most notably the Smart Brick, is designed to work seamlessly within Legos existing play system. Thats intentional. Rather than introducing a new screen or a closed ecosystem, Smart Play keeps the focus on hands-on building and tangible play the core of what Lego has
    always been.

    Its also a change thats been a long time coming.

    Well, you know, the truth of it is, you know, we started this project eight years ago, explained Julia Goldin, Legos Chief Product & Marketing Officer.
    So why now is because we are ready. We are ready to go. Thats why now. Its
    not because were trying to solve some kind of a problem. Its more because
    were ready with really great innovation. (Image credit: Future/Jacob Krol)

    That long runway was essential, Goldin said, not just to miniaturize the technology including a custom chip small enough to fit inside a Lego brick but to ensure Smart Play could exist as a true platform. Not an entirely new one, though.

    Everything we have done still is part of the system, Goldin said, noting that Smart Play integrates cohesively with Legos existing system of play and is additive by nature. This just adds a new dimension.

    Its a different beast from the likes of Legos Super Mario sets, which worked with Lego bricks but which relied on a custom Mario figure with a screen and scanner and which largely existed in their own ecosystem.

    We actually learned a lot from the Mario launch, Goldin said. We wanted no screens, we wanted no power buttons, we wanted something very seamless something that anyone could take and fit with any other set and that could actually travel across our whole system as it exists today, but also into the future. @techradar

    original sound - TechRadar

    Its clear that teams across Lego worked to preserve the tenets of the
    existing Lego system while elevating interactivity and responsiveness. Given the amount of technology packed into the Smart Brick, I had to ask how Lego views itself today: is it a toy company that also builds technology, or something else entirely?

    I dont think we can call ourselves a toy anymore because were an iconic experience company, Goldin said, reflecting a broader shift in how Lego now sees itself.

    That perspective helps explain why Smart Play avoids many of the pitfalls often associated with connected toys. Theres no screen built into the brick, no app required, and no new, entirely segmented ecosystem to buy into. Instead, intelligence resides within the brick itself, designed to enhance physical play rather than compete with it.

    As I saw during my hands-on demo, its a classic Lego set at first say Luke Skywalkers X-Wing or Darth Vaders TIE Fighter but once the Smart Brick is placed inside after being shaken to wake, characters like Luke or Vader can trigger different sounds as they approach the ship, click into place, or even pull off some fun flight maneuvers.

    Theres a very low learning curve for the Smart Brick, Smart Minifigures, and Smart Tags. (Image credit: Future/Jacob Krol)

    For Tom Donaldson, Head of Legos Creative Play Lab, that philosophy was equally important.

    If you have a screen, they tend to suck you in, Donaldson said. And we were very deliberate about saying, no, we love the Lego brick, we love building with Lego bricks, and if we want to magnify that, then certain choices probably have been advantageous to us.

    That same thinking extends to where Smart Play could go next. While todays Smart Bricks focus on responsiveness through light, sound, and interaction, Goldin sees the platform as something far more expansive over time.

    I think were just scratching the surface, she said.

    While neither Goldin nor Donaldson would comment on what sets might arrive next or how the roadmap could unfold, its clear Lego is focused on building a strong foundation for Smart Play starting with one of the most iconic themes in its lineup, Star Wars while showcasing just how much technology is
    quietly working under the hood.

    There are some of the technologies in here that we couldn't have done at all without an ASIC. In particular, the sensing technology, Donaldson said.

    That custom silicon enables the Smart Brick to quietly understand whats happening around it detecting nearby Smart Minifigures and Smart Tags, recognizing their relative positions in space, including height and distance, and triggering the appropriate response. Whether its a flash of light, a
    sound effect, or a character's reaction, the experience feels immediate and intuitive on the surface.

    Under the hood, however, theres a level of integration that Lego says simply wouldnt have been possible without going custom. The overall capabilities we could not have put together in any meaningful way size, cost, or even integrated performance without going to silicon, Donaldson said. (Image credit: Jacob Krol/Future)

    That approach hiding complexity inside a familiar brick is central to how Lego thinks about Smart Play. Rather than asking builders to learn something new, the company is betting on technology that merely stacks on the classic Lego experience.

    For now, Lego is focused on laying a strong foundation. Smart Bricks that fit into the existing system. Smart Minifigures and Smart Tags that add a layer
    of fun without replacing traditional play. And a platform designed to evolve while remaining grounded in the simplicity, creativity, and reusability that have defined the Lego brick for decades.

    Legos kicked off preorders for the first three Star Wars Smart Play sets, and the line starts at $69.99 / 59.99 / AU$99.99 for Vaders Tie Fighter that includes a Smart Brick and Charger, a Smart Minifigure, and a Smart Tag in total, its 473 pieces.

    You can also get Lukes X-Wing for $99.99 / 79.99 / AU$149.99 and the Throne Room Duel & A-Wing for $159.99 / 139.99 / AU$249.99 . You can read our first look at the Smart Play Star Wars sets here.

    A post shared by Jake Krol (@jake31krol)

    A photo posted by on

    TechRadar will be extensively covering this year's CES , and will bring you all of the big announcements as they happen. Head over to our CES 2026 news page for the latest stories and our hands-on verdicts on everything from wireless TVs and foldable displays to new phones, laptops, smart home
    gadgets, and the latest in AI.

    And dont forget to follow us on TikTok and WhatsApp for the latest from the CES show floor!



    ======================================================================
    Link to news story: https://www.techradar.com/streaming/entertainment/i-dont-think-we-can-call-our selves-a-toy-anymore-because-were-an-iconic-experience-company-lego-on-how-sma rt-bricks-expand-the-system-and-how-this-just-adds-a-new-dimension

    --- Mystic BBS v1.12 A48 (Windows/64)
    * Origin: Mystic Hobbies BBS, mystic-hobbies.com (954:895/2)