Random set of the day: Sentry

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Sentry

Sentry

©2006 LEGO Group

Today's random set is 7711 Sentry, released during 2006. It's one of 19 Exo-Force sets produced that year. It contains 78 pieces and 1 minifig, and its retail price was US$4.99/£3.99.

It's owned by 4,525 Brickset members. If you want to add it to your collection you should find it for sale at BrickLink, where new ones sell for around $36.00, or eBay.


14 comments on this article

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By in United States,

It's a good thing the pilot's a robot because there is absolutely no protection for them.

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By in United States,

I ended up with a pile of these because it was the easiest way to pick up non-marbled Exo-bots.

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By in New Zealand,

I'm getting APU vibes from the Matrix.

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By in Turkey,

These smaller Mechs are easy to build. Perfect for army building. I did a few at the time. Had great time playing with them. Now, I keep mostly the official builds.

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By in United States,

Machines piloting machines? How perverse!

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By in United Kingdom,

@MCLegoboy said:
"It's a good thing the pilot's a robot because there is absolutely no protection for them."

Even in universe both the mech and its pilot are designed to be mass produced expendable cannon fodder. The lack of protection is very much by design.

The human good guy equivalent, 7708, has no such excuse!

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By in Netherlands,

I used to have two of these (now one). They are great for what they are (sentries). Not huge, but they make the regular sized battle machines look like they can be bossed around. The pilots are not protected because these are basically the battle droids of Exo-Force: overwhelm with sheer numbers. In the lore the copper-colored Iron Drones in particular are the easiest to produce in quantities, but they have limited AI and are usually simplistic in their forward charge. It takes the silver robots, the Devestators, to lead them in any meaningful strategy. Which is cool worldbuilding if you ask me.

For what it is, the set does feel suitably bulky. The joints were limited at the time because the legs mostly use click hinges, but that didn't stop them from being playable and posable when needed. The arms have all the range of motion you need because they move up and down at two spots (allowing for a 'recoil' movement) and side to side. The small canon is apparently powerful because two make up the laser of the Bridge Walker (7713). The rockets can of course be removed. The figure itself is great. Its quite detailed and molded in copper, an unusual color from the time. If I had any complaints it would be the fragility of the antenna, but for an Exo-Force set it's quite stable.

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By in United Kingdom,

Always thought they could tie Exo-Force into Ninjago - multiverse stylee

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By in United Kingdom,

@Slave2lego said:
"Always thought they could tie Exo-Force into Ninjago - multiverse stylee "

Isn’t Chima supposed to a Ninjago-adjacent universe? If they can include Chima in their mech-themed multiverse they can have Exo-Force, surely

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By in United Kingdom,

@Brickalili said:
" @MCLegoboy said:
"It's a good thing the pilot's a robot because there is absolutely no protection for them."

Even in universe both the mech and its pilot are designed to be mass produced expendable cannon fodder. The lack of protection is very much by design.

The human good guy equivalent, 7708, has no such excuse!"


In fairness, the human good guy equivalent does have a different excuse, which is that it wasn't really designed as a battle machine (despite Ryo's frequent daydreams about it being as such), and is more of a maintenance mech to give a mechanic more height and reach when repairing the larger battle machines. They're pressed into battle when the circumstances get desperate enough, but it's not what they were in-universe made for, so there's not the same requirement for protection as on a full battle mech.

That does raise the question of why the Uplink mechs were designed with a massive gun and rocket launcher if they're only meant to be used for maintenance, but...!

-
Personally didn't have this set, but I did have it's two nearest equivalents - the aforementioned good-guy version, Uplink, and the second-year's smallest robot mech 8101 - so I guess I got kinda close to it?

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By in United States,

@Brickalili said:
" @Slave2lego said:
"Always thought they could tie Exo-Force into Ninjago - multiverse stylee "

Isn’t Chima supposed to a Ninjago-adjacent universe? If they can include Chima in their mech-themed multiverse they can have Exo-Force, surely"


Of course, nothing's stopping you from headcanoning them into two parts of the same multiverse.

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By in United Kingdom,

"Sentry goin' up!"

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By in United States,

Holy peak!

This is one of my favorite Exo-Force sets - it’s just a cool little grunt mech with some solid articulation and nice little weapon loadout. Man, I wish LEGO would bring back Exo-Force or at least give it a spiritual successor…

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By in Germany,

@Brickalili said:
" @Slave2lego said:
"Always thought they could tie Exo-Force into Ninjago - multiverse stylee "

Isn’t Chima supposed to a Ninjago-adjacent universe? If they can include Chima in their mech-themed multiverse they can have Exo-Force, surely"


Where is that info from?

First time hearing that...

Somehow I think modern day TLG wants us to "forget" about Exo-Force, because it heavily broke with the minifig "styleguide".

Not only do the figures have drastically stylized faces, but the characters are also presented in a much more realistic (though manga-styled) version prominently on the box art.

Regarding the lack of protection:
Why would you even bother to have a small robot pilot a larger mech, when you could make the robot the size of the mech in the first place?

Funny how the human counterpart focuses on having big bulky shoulder armor (or whatever that's supposed to be) but leaves the pilot more or less exposed.

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