

On the other, some things are a bit annoying, like the trigger cap that seems to slide up and down. On the one hand, the model itself is quite sturdy, with several locking pieces that prevent any sort of catastrophic disassembly. A K’NEX version of a rubber band serves to return the trigger and pusher after each use. Everything else is built around that, including the trigger. The core of the blaster contains a magazine well, pusher, flywheel cage, barrel, and battery box (three AAs are required). I still think the “main” build looks best, so I’ll stick with that.Īssembly, while time-consuming, is ultimately quite satisfying. If for some reason that’s not to your liking, online instructions exist for many alternate models. For me, though, it took around 40 minutes to fully assemble the base model. There are a LOT of pieces, so the time it takes to build will vary based on age and experience. The C10 Crossover Legacy is, at its core, a large crossbow-shaped blaster. Because while $60 is very steep for a proprietary Stryfe-like blaster…it’s very reasonable for a 460-piece, motorized building set. The same concepts apply, but perhaps with more focus on the building side of things, they’ll succeed. While the original line may have died, it’s been rebranded as Cyber-X.

These consisted of blaster “cores” around which a blaster body was built, and it saw everything from single-shot pistols to revolvers to a semi-auto, magazine-fed blaster. More than a few years ago, K’NEX entered the blaster market with the K-FORCE series.
