"LEGOs—they're not just for good kids anymore. A book written by two former employees of the Danish plastic-brick giant is burning up the Amazon.com sales charts—and raising eyebrows on the other side of the Atlantic."

—Fox News (Read More)

"A Christmas bestseller, Forbidden LEGO: Build the models your parents warned you against, is a controversial new book that gives children detailed instructions on how to make weapons such as catapults and 'automatic ping-pong ball launchers' purely out of Lego."

—The Daily Mail (Read More)

"Two ex LEGO employees, Ulrik Pilegaard (senior designer) and Mike Dooley (Mindstorms boss), have written a book about LEGO hacking. Forbidden LEGO is full of dangerous projects which break the LEGO house rules. . . . In fact, breaking rules and folding non-lego objects into the mix are so important that each project has a "LEGO Rules Broken" list. Rebel-tastic!"

—Gadget Lab, Wired.com (Read More)

"A surprise Christmas bestseller, dubbed 'the Anarchist Cookbook of the nursery', is topping the Santa Claus wish list for naughty children and their parents all over the world."

—The Daily Telegraph (Read More)

"My favorite book in the lot is Forbidden LEGO, a collection of playfully irresponsible building projects dreamed up by two former LEGO employees. These are the kinds of toys you imagine designers drafting for fun, but fuddy-duddy safety concerns prevent them from ever coming to market."

—The Holiday Gadget Guide (Read More)

Article featured in SkyNews (Read More)

Article featured in the China Times (Read More)

"If you've ever felt like using your LEGOs for more than just building static objects, this is the book for you. Forbidden LEGO is an unauthorized book full of awesome LEGO projects, such as a toy gun that shoots LEGO plates, a candy catapult, and a continuous ping-pong ball launcher. Written by a former LEGO senior designer and former LEGO senior product manager, it's the ultimate how-to for building rogue LEGO creations."

—Uncrate (Read More)

Forbidden LEGO is "finally here, and yes, you want a copy...[The authors] wrote the book to give some kind of a tantalizing hint at the kinds of things that go on behind the scenes at Lego, and the kinds of neat things that might get released in a world without product liability suits."

—Evil Mad Scientist (Read More)

"Disregarding the official rules of LEGO (rules? who knew?) and some of the basic tenants of safety, authors and confirmed LEGO master builders Ulrik Pilegaard and Mike Dooley present an unholy do-it-yourself guide of taboo techniques (i.e. glue, brick modification, non-standard parts) for creating blocky abominations, including less-than-lethal weapons that fire candy, ping-pong balls (above), and even other LEGOs."

—PageOne, City Magazine (Read More)

"Remember building cool things with those wonderful plastic blocks? Each one was a marvel of engineering, no doubt. The 'official' Lego manuals forbid projects that fire projectiles or use non-standard parts. But in 'forbidden' Lego, you can build a rocket launcher, or a catapult that shoots M&M's. Fun for all ages!"

—The Public Library of Cincinnati and Hamilton County (Read More)

Forbidden Lego is "A well-illustrated and funny guide to building five projects that actively break a number of Lego rules...check it out for yourself and be sure to have a bunch of Lego bricks hanging around because you'll want to dive right in."

—Ars Geek (Read More)