Fanmode ver. 4

Fanmode readers would have noticed some tweaks to the format over the past week or so. These long-overdue changes are meant to help readers better navigate through the site and help us better do what we set out to do.

Fanmode was set up to highlight toy-related links that don’t appear on high-traffic web sites. We’re here to point out the obscure and the forgotten, to link to the neat Flickr photo with a few hits instead of the one currently on Explore, to tell you about the quirky-cool line most collectors ignore.

We’re less interested in what toy fans can buy next and more interested in seeing what toy fans can do with what they have now. We’re particularly keen on discovering what clever things creative toy fans are doing with their toys whether it’s an impressive custom, a whimsical photo, an amazing digirama, a creative Lego MOC or an ingenious fanmode.

To better do this, the toy links format has been changed. The front page now highlights the last 15 toy links published with the Toy Links category view now functioning as the toy links archive. Finding related links in the archive will be much easier thanks to the tags. As this new format is something of a reboot, there might not be many tagged links at the moment but given the fact Fanmode adds over 100 toy links every month, readers should find reason soon enough to spend time sifting through the archives.

Discontinued categories (the old toy links format, interesting Creative Commons-licensed toy photos, English-language review roundups, the Optimus Prime-themed love fests, etc.) still exist though they aren’t visible on the sidebar. The reason they’ve been removed was to direct the attention of first-time visitors to currently emphasised categories.

We hope these changes will help readers better understand the Fanmode mission statement. We set out to remind you toys are fun and to show you why creative toy fans are cool, and we’ve had a blast doing that for the past 21 months. We expect things to only get better.

Great success

Toy links

Classics Skyfire Prime.
Alpha Magnus’ superlative fanmode combining Jetfire and Optimus Prime. (A how-to video. YouTube, 5:46.)

Tags: ,

Toy links

Armed Base.
BBB’s Assemble Borg version of the Gundam Dendrobium Orchis. (Click on the image for a better look.)

Tags: , ,

Toy links

MagneForce Acroyear 2.
Scroll down and click on the photo to see a vintage-inspired upgrade kit for the Microman MagneForce figures. The kit will be sold at Wonder Festival Summer 2009.

Tags: , ,

Toy links

The Art of Toy.
Click on the thumbnails to see some neat digirama.

Tags: , ,

Toy links

Checkmate. Checkmate.
A photo by Matt Brooker.

Tags: , , ,

Toy links

Teamwork. Teamwork.
Photos by Justin Whitlock and Mick.

Tags: , , , ,

Toy links

Bruce Lego.
More Lego mosaics by Stefan Sacherer. (See also.)

Tags: , , , ,

Toy links

Booming sales in toyland.
“There’s a robot market now, but will there be one in a few years?” A Time article from 1984.

Tags: , ,

Toy links

Louis Marx: the toy king.
“In 1928 Marx got the greatest idea in toydom’s history. Rounding a corner in Los Angeles one day, he stopped to watch a Filipino whittle away at a circular block of wood, attach it to a string and then bounce the block up and down the string, as his fellow-countrymen had been doing for as long as anyone could remember.” A Time article from 1955.

Tags: , , ,

Next Page →