Yeah, there was a LOT of stuff at Lego. They debuted over 250 new sets at the show, and trying to keep up with them all can be difficult. Below you will find the best of the rest:
View the full Lego Toy Fair Gallery
Lone Ranger
I can't imagine this doing well unless the movie is crazy good.
Castle
The 25th anniversary of LEGO Castle is marked by five new sets, including Gold Getaway ($19.99) and King's Castle ($99.99), to build a classic kingdom of knights in shining armor, dragons and treasure for builders ages 5 and up.
Creator
LEGO CREATORâ„¢ kits ($6.99 - $69.99) offer three models in one box in themes such as vehicles, creatures, and buildings, enabling children to build, play, and then rebuild their creations.
Check out this triple changer set. Remind you of the Transformer Springer?
Mindstorm
LEGO MINDSTORMS pioneered a new way to build and play with LEGO bricks when it was first introduced in 1998. To commemorate the 15th anniversary, the world's original smart toy gets an upgrade in LEGO MINDSTORMS EV3 ($349.99), the most exciting and innovative LEGO robotics set ever. With the new platform, children can build, program and play with a starter robot in less than 20 minutes and can ease into the process with on-brick programming. Advanced users get tech upgrades, like a Linux operating system, that make sophisticated robot building and programming child's play. PC and Mac compatibility, plus integration with iOS and Android phones, MP3 players and tablets, take robot command and control to a whole new level.
Technic
Experienced builders enjoy the challenge of LEGO Technic® sets, such as the Race Car ($19.99) and Excavator ($79.99), featuring detailed functionality that mimics their real world counterparts, and two building instructions so that children can create multiple models with one kit.
Friends
Despite the controversy, Lego continues ahead with their line for girls. There's actually some cool stuff in there.