During the autumn, 16 participants in eight pairs competed for the title of Norway’s first LEGO Masters. In the final, there were three teams left, who were given the task of building whatever they wanted in 25 hours – the biggest task the participants have had so far.
The final pairs were the “twins” Øyvind and Ole Jakob Viske Bjelland (21), Are Odland (32) Grzegorz “Gregor” Górczyński (37), and Ebbe (15) and Joakim Wang (50) – and the winners were historic.
Ebbe (15) and Joakim (50) were not really allowed to participate in the LEGO Masters
The series went to Ebbe and Joakim – making Ebbe the youngest LEGO Masters winner in the program’s history.
25 hours LEGO construction
After an adventurous autumn with the history of LEGO buildings, there were three hopeful teams left who were ready to give the last they had in this year’s final. The final and decisive task gave the remaining participants the freedom to build exactly what they wanted – with 25 hours on the clock.
The participants all went for different storytelling. Ebbe and Joakim chose to build a larger version of the famous LEGO set “Skull Island” from 1995.
Are and Gregor went for the idea of a city with miners who made a living by digging out diamonds. Ole Jakob and Øyvind built a city from Greek mythology.
Piece champion Legernes was impressed, not only in the final, but throughout the season, by the finalists who remained in the end.
– They showed new pages that have not been seen before in the LEGO Masters context. They had a unique and impressive way of carrying out both the storytelling and the visual, he tells TV 2 over the phone.
Hard to keep it a secret
Although Legernes has been the only one who has made decisions about the buildings before, this time he got help from the previous participants. They were given one vote each, which they could give to the building they were most impressed with.
After the chip master was awarded 10 points, and the remaining were awarded one point each, it was decided – Joakim and Ebbe were the winners of LEGO Masters Norway.
See interview with Ebbe and Joakim at the top of the case
– It has been a difficult secret to keep, Joakim says and laughs when TV 2 calls him and Ebbe.
Even though they have known that they were the winners for a little less than half a year, they do not feel that life is very different.
– We have to remind each other that it has actually happened, says Ebbe and thinks it will feel more real when they see the final.