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Basic Polydron Pieces

This photo by the manufacturer shows some basic Polydron pieces and colors. There are many other type of pieces, however, like pentagons and hexagons.

Polydron is a brand of building sets. Most of the sets by this manufacturer have frames or tiles as the main pieces. Magnetic tiles are common among the building sets, but the non-magnetic tiles are much rarer. Polydron, however, has many building kits with plastic flat polygons that connect without magnets.

These pieces have serrated edges that lock together almost like pieces of a puzzle. Small pins slide to the side just enough to make space for the parts of another piece. They work like locks, holding the pieces firmly in place. This system allows you to connect the pieces at different angles and make flat surfaces or geometric sculptures.

The pieces of these sets are big – even the smallest of them are a few inches long. Because of this size and lack of any magnets, they are very safe to play with – though they may be too abstract for the smaller kids. They have different colors and shapes – triangles, squares, pentagons, hexagons, and so on. Some of the biggest tiles have openings in them, so you can also connect something to their centers.

These sets have almost no decorations or moving pieces like wheels, so the abstract geometric shapes are the specialty of Polydron. These sets are great for explaining kids mathematical concepts, so they can be used in schools.

Basic Polydron Pieces
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Welcome to BuildKitPedia

As a mother of a big family, I was genuinely captivated by children’s toys when our little ones came into our lives. What initially seemed like mere sources of entertainment turned out to be a vast world of opportunities for our children’s development. Among all the toys, we discovered that children’s building blocks were the most productive in nurturing their creative abilities. Watching my own kids play and use their imagination has been really great.

Motivated by this realization, we embarked on a journey of exploration with our kids, purchasing various construction sets and building kits. As our children constructed their imaginative creations, we started capturing these moments through photography. It soon dawned on me that this experience might be of interest to others as well. Thus, I made the decision to create a website that would unite all those who share our passion for children’s building blocks.

Later, parents from all around the world joined us. They sent us their ideas and pictures of buildings. People from different parts of the world shared what they had found.

People from the countries that used to be part of the USSR were very active. The Encyclopedia of Building Sets has a lot of Building Sets and Blocks from the Soviet Union and other socialist countries, like Germany and the Czech Republic. We started making the website 20 years ago, but it wasn’t on its own platform. It was on a page of a very good toy store’s website.

Sadly, things don’t last forever. The store closed, and we got all our files. These files were lying on the home computer for many years without any movement. Only during the time of COVID, I finally organized this database.

I know that the pictures taken 15-20 years ago with old cameras aren’t of high resolution. Also, the platform that hosted our site made the pictures smaller because the internet was very slow back then. You might remember a time when you had to make phone calls to connect to the internet.

Even so, I felt really bad that this stuff might just get thrown away. So I decided to bring it back. I mixed these older pictures with ones of new, colorful building sets from Amazon. Most of these manufacturers are still around and working. For the ones that are really old, from the time of the Soviets, or if the manufacturers don’t exist anymore, I tried to find similar ones on Amazon.

It was important to me that the website could support itself. Referral links help with this. “As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases.” Sometimes, I had to do a lot of research on Amazon to tell apart real building sets from fake ones. There are a lot of fake ones out there.

To me, pseudo-building kits are sets of pieces where kids are told to build just one thing, following the instructions. A real building set should let kids use their imagination and create lots of different buildings, figures, and models from the same pieces.

I invite you to add your memories, thoughts, links, and pictures to this encyclopedia. I am also open to suggestions for improving our catalog, as we strive to create a resource that meets the needs and interests of all engaged participants.

BuildKitPedia
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Tegu Jumper

The new set is hardly related to the popular type of clothing – jumper, the name is based on the verb Jump. The largest of the 4 is reinforced with 4 wheels with fat tires. Apparently, you are supposed to jump on them. You can build everything – from a simple motorcycle to a truck with a trailer. If there was a propeller, it would be great, but no – the propellers are in other sets. But Tegu now has a character, so to speak, “Tegu’s face” – a cylinder with eyes – indicated by an arrow.

Tegu Jumper
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Geomag E-Motion – Magnetic Spinning Tops

One of the sets with the spinning tops. It was interesting to play with, but we were more glad to have the transparent pentagonal panel (it happened when we didn’t have a separate set with panels – Geomag Kids Just Panels yet). The tops spin really nice, but the surface has to be smooth – we launched them on a plastic table.

Geomag E-Motion – Magnetic Spinning Tops