The Roundabout Show with Tim Courtney
At 17, Bjarne Tveskov answered a newspaper ad for a LEGO spaceship designer, quit school, and never went back. He designed the Monorail, early Blacktron sets, and helped shape LEGO's first digital products. Decades later, he prototyped Smart Brick concepts from his basement using childhood bricks alongside new ones. Every piece still connects. This conversation maps the arc from bricks to digital tools to AI, held together by one idea: the best creative work happens at the resolution of imagination, not photorealism. Bjarne makes the case that repetition is a creative practice, point of view is the new competitive advantage, and weirdness might be the most valuable thing humans bring to a world of averaged-out content. Key Themes * Testing with kids reveals what designers miss. Children ignored the monorail and pointed to new helmet visors. A 10-year-old caught a tree growing on sand in the LEGO Minecraft prototype. * Resolution over realism. Pixelated LEGO bricks' power is approximation. The Smart Brick speaks gibberish so kids fill in their own stories. * Repetition as creative fuel. Bjarne takes the same forest walk daily, and posts the same Instagram motifs. Constants free the mind when one's job demands novelty. * Point of view is the new moat. AI averages human knowledge. Bjarne's corporate naming clients burn through a thousand ChatGPT names, then call him. * Modularity as philosophy. Bjarne loves combining existing elements in unexpected ways. 26 letters to make unique names. Childhood bricks that build new models. Key Takeaways * Your users will surprise you. Test early, with real people, and watch what they actually point to. * LEGO's system proves that backwards compatibility compounds over decades. Old bricks work with new ones. * Protect space for analog thinking. The creative ideas AI can't replicate often happens on a walk, not in front of a screen. * Data overload is real. Indexing on "Vibes" can be a valid response to information overload. * Cultivate what's weird about you. If the only things you can say are what an LLM can say, where's your unique value? * Viral demand adds pressure to accelerate product timelines. LEGO Minecraft went from idea to shelf in six months when the norm was 18-24. Chapters 03:07 - Becoming a LEGO Designer at 17 05:53 - The Birth of LEGO Space Factions 10:35 - Designing the Futuron Monorail 14:49 - LEGO Space Culture and the Internet 21:57 - LEGO Minecraft: From Viral Demand to Product 36:07 - Finding Joy in Repetition 39:00 - From Bricks to Digital: LEGO Darwin and Mindstorms 47:28 - The Smart Brick and Design Resolution 53:01 - Technology, Culture, and the Internet's Evolution 57:20 - Missing the Old Internet 1:02:18 - What Holds Value in the AI Era 1:06:05 - Vibes, Data Bankruptcy, and Human Feeling 1:16:09 - Bjarne's Red Thread: Combining Existing Elements Links * https://lovetobuild.net/ [https://lovetobuild.net/] * https://www.linkedin.com/in/tveskovdotcom/ [https://www.linkedin.com/in/tveskovdotcom/] * https://ideas.LEGO.com [https://ideas.LEGO.com] About Tim Tim works with leadership teams on community product strategy and co-creation programs. If this episode sparked something for your team: tim@roundabout.community [tim@roundabout.community]
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