Lost on a deserted island without video games.

3D-2D-Pixel-Art Mashup: The N3rds finished with classic isometric pixel-art styles.

A collection of famous DC and Marvel superheroes reduced to super awesomeness. All models can be built with standard 2×2 and 2×4 LEGO Bricks.

A collection of 3d pixel-art humans made with Qubicle.

A collection of nerds who can be built with standard LEGO bricks.

A collection of 3d pixel-art zombies made with Qubicle.

A selection of 3d pixel-art robots and androids made with Qubicle.

A collection of 3d pixel-art cars made with Qubicle.

The first level of the original Donkey Kong Arcade (1981) revisited in 3D. Built with 73,000 cubes in 8 different colors.

A pixel chick in front of the Whisky a Go Go in L.A.

This zombie kitten could be built with standard Lego 2×2 and 2×4 bricks. The final model would be 115cm tall and consist of about 15,000 bricks. Just ask if you want a copy.

The first video realized with the new Qubicle Plugin for Maya is an hommage to side-scrolling jump’n'runs. The mighty Q:Bot 3000 is exploring Happyland to find the hidden crate.

This is the first video on earth showing the awesome power of the Qubicle Rasterizer!

This classic stop-motion brickfilm demonstrates another possible usage of the Qubicle Constructor: Desktop Lego modeling.

This is the last demo made before the release of the Qubicle Plugin for Maya. This video is an hommage to the fantastic racing-game Out Run. Including beautiful heightmap generated landscapes.

This is the second video created with Qubicle. It’s a small jump’n'run sequence inspired by old video games like megaman.

Working with Qubicle and creating pixel-art is pretty similar. So if you want to learn Qubcile it’s a good idea to learn the pixel-art basics first. This tutorial covers some golden rules and tips about creating pixel-art with Photoshop.

The Qube-Bowl is the biggest building realized with Qubicle so far. It’s a giant tennis-arena with 9000 seats and built with approximately 125,000 cubes.