The Sims Hogwarts Wizarding World Harry

Absent as a theme for seven years, LEGO has returned to the magical land of Harry Potter. This time around the theme is titled Wizarding World, since it encompasses both the Harry Potter books/films and the current Fantastic Beasts films. Fittingly, the largest set of the new wave is the setting for so many of Harry’s adventures, Hogwarts. Since LEGO began producing Harry Potter sets way back in 2001, there have been at least four distinct versions of the iconic wizarding school Hogwarts, plus others set in and around the castle grounds. Each version has a slightly different twist, and this latest edition attempts to bring a hint of proper scale to the monolithic school, opting to forego recreating the whole castle and focusing on a single aspect in greater detail. 75954 Hogwarts Great Hall retails for $99.99 USD, includes 878 pieces, and is available now in the USA, and elsewhere Aug. 1.

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The box contents & stickers

I think Sims 4 have to make an expansion pack about Wizarding World of Harry Potter Hogwarts,magics,characters,places,creatures,letters,owls,ministry of magic. The Wizarding World of Harry Potter. Hogwarts is also the jewel in the 'Wizarding World' crown. Each park contains part of The Wizarding World of Harry Potter at Universal Orlando. Diagon Alley is found at Universal Studios Florida, and Hogsmeade is in Universal’s Islands of Adventure. Check here for more tips and tricks for your visit to the Wizarding World of Harry Potter Orlando. The Hogwarts Express was one of my favorite experiences at The Wizarding World of Harry Potter. I don’t generally recommend spending extra on park hopper tickets, but I recommend that you buy a Park-to-Park ticket at Universal Orlando for the Hogwarts Express.

Despite having nearly 900 pieces, the box contains only six numbered bags, each stuffed quite full. The three large dark grey plates which serve as the hall’s foundations and roof are loose in the box. The single instruction manual and the set’s two sticker sheets are sealed together in a bag. Since one of the sticker sheets is entirely devoted to the Mirror of Erised and features a reflective finish, it’s good that it’s protected, since it would be easily damaged if it were loose in the box. The second sticker sheet has the four house banners, the clockface, and patches of stonework for the tower. Despite the presence of the two sticker sheets, the stickering in this set feels minimal.

Ts3 simblr ts3 cc ts3cc s3 s3cc s3 cc Hogwarts wizarding world harry potter magic Sonya. Sims 4 cc sims 4 harry potter not my cc obviously i suck so much and you. From magical spells to magical creatures, from dark villains to daring heroes, it’s all here at The Wizarding World of Harry Potter™, now open at Universal Studios Hollywood™. Explore the mysteries of Hogwarts™ castle, visit the shops of Hogsmeade™, and sample fare from some of the wizarding world’s best-known establishments. It’s a train ride like no other, and it’s one of the most immersive experiences at The Wizarding World of Harry Potter. Board the famous Hogwarts Express at Hogsmeade Station at Universal’s Islands of Adventure or Kings Cross Station at Universal Studios Florida and take a (mostly) cheerful ride through the British countryside.

The build

Bag 1 contains several minifigures and a series of quick mini-builds–the basilisk, boat, Fawkes the Phoenix, and Mirror of Erised–to introduce some play value to the set immediately. Bag 2 begins the Great Hall, which sits atop two dark grey 16×16 plates, with extra plates on a couple of the sides to give it slightly larger dimensions. A little rock work around the edges hints at the castle’s clifftop location. The dais for the Hogwarts staff at the front of the hall sits two plates above the rest of the floor, and is accomplished with a single large plate with studs around the edges and a blue tile beneath the center. Although an odd technique at first glance, this design helps make disassembly easier, since prying apart large swaths of plates is not only frustrating but also likely to damage the elements.

By the end of Bag 2, the hall has begun to take shape, the interior of the hall nearly complete with tables and food.

Bag 3 is a bit tedious, adding the long rows of windows and the exterior buttresses. This section almost entirely consists of simple brick stacking, along with inserting panes into 40 square windows. The result, however, looks great even without the rest of the detailing in place yet.

Bags 4 and 5 round out the Great Hall with a roof and gothic spikes along the eaves and a few small turreted spires along the roof’s apex.


Bag 6 then adds the last remaining bit of architecture: Dumbledore’s tower. The tower has four floors, with each of the lower levels made with 4×4 quarter circle panel bricks, spaced out a few studs for a larger footprint. The roof uses a combination of conical elements and some angled plates to create the large spire roof, and the plates are held in place at 45° in relation to the stud rows thanks to a neat technique that eschews turntables or hinges, relying instead on the natural tolerances afforded by half-stud offsets.

Universal

The parts

Hogwarts is a magical place, especially for builders who like new elements. There are quite a few entirely new elements in the Hogwarts Great Hall, some of which are currently unique to the set, and others appear in a number of sets in this wave, like the magical wands. Speaking of the wands, this set is a great way to get your hands on a lot of them at once, as the set includes eight total across four different colors. The wands are packaged as pairs attached to a sprue, which is great news for smaller sets that may feature only a single wizarding character. In this set, all eight wands belong to a wizard or witch, with no extras. Removing the wands from the sprue cleanly proved a little challenging, with the sprue attachment point at the base where the minifigure holds it, not wanting to let go cleanly.

The Sims Hogwarts Wizarding World Harry Potter

The wands featured in all the previous sets were simply black or brown lightsaber blades (bar 4L), making them ludicrously oversized, more akin to a walking staff than a wand useful for practicing your flick and swish technique. The new wands are precisely six plates in length, but apart from their looks, the cool thing about this new element is that it’s the first element with a minifigure-hand-sized ball, designed to be held by a minifigure hand in multiple directions. At last, minifigure wizards can assault the dark lord with proper wand technique. Besides the ball end, the ring around the wand can also be gripped. The narrow tip looks close to the size of a plume/accessory hole, but is slightly too large, placing its dimensions out of System.

The wands are made of the same soft plastic as plants, not standard ABS. One issue that I encountered is that–because the ball is just a touch larger than a minifigure’s hand–there’s no good angle to insert the wand into a character’s hand. The soft plastic readily picks up nicks and scratches from normal use, similar to bows and a few other accessories. This is unlikely to bother kids, but adult fans may find their perfectionist tendencies grating. The picture below shows the state of Dumbledore’s wand after being used only for this review.

Wands are far from the only new element, however. Hagrid’s lantern technically first appeared in the Xtra kit 40312 Streetlamps a few weeks ago, but it’s clearly been made for this line. It captures a transparent yellow 1×1 round brick inside it. As a bit of trivia, it joins a very short list of LEGO elements that feature solid studs without the word LEGO embossed on top. Other notable entries include the Homemaker Figure Head and a Technic connector. Let us know in the comments if you know of others.

The candles which adorn the ceiling of the Great Hall consist of two new elements: a flame, and a rod connector. Together, they accomplish something that LEGO fans have been trying at for ages: an appropriately scaled candle that doesn’t look like a raging inferno.Just like the larger plume/flame element introduced in 2009, this one features both plume and rod sized connectors for added versatility. The candle, which looks remarkably like a “miss” marker for Battleship, is a simple tube slightly larger around than a stud and four plates long, with male and female rod connectors on each end. The possibilities for this element are endless, especially once they inevitably become available in more colors.


In 2004 LEGO introduced the 1x1x2/3 slope, better known as the “cheese” slope thanks to the yellow version’s resemblance to a wedge of the stuff. Two years ago, Nexo Knights brought us the quadruple convex 1×1 slope, or pyramid slope. This year, LEGO is expanding the 1×1 slope category with the 1×1 double convex slope. The two sloped sides meet at the apex at an angle just a hair shallower than 90°, dashing hopes of easy integration into mosaics. Here they serve as tiny dormer windows on the Great Hall’s sloped roof.

Next up we have a new type of half cone, the Cone 2x4x3. This element falls firmly in the category of “wait, why wasn’t this a piece before?” While we’ve had at least 4 styles of cones that fit on a 4×4 cylinder footprint before, only the roof tile texture half-cone 2x4x4 introduced earlier this year matches the 4x8x6 half cone in slope, and that piece has limited use outside of castle spires. Coincidentally, that roof tile texture piece also appears in this set in dark grey for the first time.

One more new element must be mentioned: the long-awaited 2×2 diamond lattice window pane insert. LEGO introduced the diamond lattice pane for arched windows way back in 1996, but it’s taken another 22 years for that to percolate over to the rectangular window frame. Thankfully, this set goes out of its way to make up for that dearth, providing 40 of the new pieces.

Wizarding World Of Harry Potter Hollywood

Finally, there’s a multitude of elements appearing in new colors, of which this is just a sampling. And while not new, there’s a lovely rainbow of gemstones.

The finished set

The completed structure looks stately and proud, just as Hogwarts should. The gothic architecture carries through well, and the grey slate roofs look more accurate than the sand green used in many of the previous sets.

The set is a cutaway, featuring a detailed facade on one side and open access to the interior on the other. In fact, it probably helps to think of the set as two different scales, with microscale from the front and minifigure scale from the back. The exterior facade is moderately close to the source material, especially if you picture the porch/courtyard as microscale and not minifigure scale, and the Great Hall and Great Staircase Tower seem appropriately scaled to each other. The one key missing detail is the trio of small staggered towers that make up the Headmaster’s Office, that tiny tower sprouting out of the side of the Great Staircase Tower. It’s an iconic part of the Hogwarts silhouette, and it’s a huge miss for it to be absent here. From the inside, the tower actually is a mix of scenes–more of a playset than an accurate model. The bottom floor features a moving spiral staircase, and the first floor (we’ll say first rather than second, since Hogwarts is in the UK, after all) is a small potions class with bottles and brews. The second floor has a stand for the Sorting Hat, one of Aragog’s offspring, and a bit of treasure, and the top floor has a roost for Fawkes and a holder for the Mirror of Erised.

The Mirror of Erised serves as a mini vignette on its own. You can take it down from its tower storage rack and play out its various scenes. Two mirror panels are included, each double-sided for a total of four unique portraits of deepest, darkest desires. The reflective surface with sketched outlines of minifigures is charming in a uniquely LEGO way.


The interior of the Great Hall looks magnificent, with candles floating high above and house banners proudly displayed at each end. The banners are double-sided, with Ravenclaw and Slytherin on one and Hufflepuff and Gryffindor on the other.

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For all their simplicity, the tables and benches work remarkably well with the short-legged Hogwarts students, and the hall gives the feeling of a much larger space.Going back outside, the front courtyard looks good, though the scaling effect is spoiled a bit by the presence of minifigures. There’s a small dock for Hagrid to take new students on the unusual hazing ritual of approach by boat.

Interestingly, the set has undergone quite a few changes from the version we handled at Toy Fair New York in February. Look closely, and you’ll note that this set dropped an entire layer of bricks from the foundation, and–much to our disappointment–removed the awesome new arch elements from the courtyard fence.

The minifigures & creatures

Hogwarts Great Hall includes 10 minifigures and a number of creatures. The set is centered around Harry’s first two years at the wizarding school, with creatures and characters from both Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone and Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets. The set includes three professors: Transfiguration professor Minerva McGonagall, Headmaster Albus Dumbledore, and Defense Against the Dark Arts professor Quirinus Quirrell. McGonagall is the weakest of the three characters, looking only a bit like her on-screen character, partly due to the use of legs rather than the new skirt piece (as she had in early versions of this set). Dumbledore is Richard Harris’ film portrayal rather than Michael Gambon’s, and he sports a new long grey hairpiece. Quirrell is a character long missing from the LEGO lineup, having only appeared once before in a small set in 2001, before the line had transitioned to skin-toned minifigures.

Quirrell hides a monstrous secret beneath his bright turban, and both Dumbledore and McGonagall have reversible heads to show their displeasure in finding one of their colleagues serving the dark lord.All three characters have printing on the back, and Dumbledore has detailed printing on the front that’s normally covered by his beard.


Five Hogwarts students are included: Ron Weasley, Hermione Granger, Harry Potter, Susan Bones, and Draco Malfoy. Being from Gryffindor, Ron, Hermione, and Harry all share the same torso with their house colors on their ties and sweaters. Susan and Draco each sport their own Hufflepuff and Slytherin colors with prints that are subtly different. Despite 10 years worth of Harry Potter sets before now, Susan marks the first appearance of a character in a Hufflepuff school uniform (not counting that one microfig). LEGO’s graphic designers have done a fantastic job of designing the characters’ faces to look childish, appropriate for these first- or second-year students.

All five students have reversible heads showing anger, sadness, or fear.

And then we have two staples of Hogwarts, the beloved Care of Magical Creatures professor Rubeus Hagrid and Sir Nicholas de Mimsy-Porpington, better known as Nearly Headless Nick.

Hagrid, being a half-giant, towers above the rest of the characters, and therefore a standard minifigure won’t do. Since the very beginning, LEGO Hagrid versions have used a custom torso. The arms were redesigned in 2004–keeping the hands with creepy molded fingers–but the awkward body with ludicrously large feet persisted. Finally, however, LEGO has given Hagrid a proper makeover from top to bottom, and it’s an astounding upgrade. The new version uses short minifigure legs, arms with Technic pin connectors and standard minifigure hands. Hagrid also gets a new, more accurate beard/hairpiece, which is hard plastic unlike the older rubber version.


Hagrid’s head is single-sided and the torso only decorated on the front, though Nick shows a frown on the reverse and has detailed torso printing on both sides.

Next up we have Fawkes the Phoenix, the amazing bird of flame and fire. Fawkes is brick built, a simple combination of common red, orange, and black pieces.

Fawkes is an admirable effort at sculpting an elegant creature at this small scale, and we’d probably think it looks quite good, except that LEGO has already produced a special Fawkes element that is simply stunning. Released in 2002 in the 4730 Chamber of Secrets, the dual-molded orange-and-red Fawkes was one of the best creatures to come out of the early Harry Potter theme. The new Fawkes pales in comparison. It’s truly a shame that LEGO chose to move to a brick-built version here, but if you can stomach paying $20 to buy the old version, it makes a magnificent upgrade.

And then we have to talk about the Basilisk. It’s rare that something in an otherwise great set falls so horribly short of expectations, but the Basilisk is bad. The brick-built Basilisk has six articulated segments, and resembles a monstrous snake only in the vaguest sense, in that it doesn’t have legs and does have fangs. The dark red mouth looks more like a bad lipstick job than an open maw, and the flat segments with boat studs on the bottom make the Basilisk very prone to tipping to the side if you raise its head at all. The version we saw in New York wasn’t great, but the new colors on the final version have made the snake far more cartoonish. Perhaps the designers ran up against a budget limitation for this design, but it would have been better to leave this creature out than subject what should be one of Harry’s most dangerous opponents to this indignity. The set doesn’t even include a hiding/storage place for it, so it hangs out awkwardly on the edges of the set.

Oh, and that same Chamber of Secrets set from way back in 2002 that included the lovely molded Fawkes? It also included a Basilisk. We’ll let you decide which is more fearsome.

Turning to creatures more cuddly, both Harry and Ron have their familiars. Scabbers is a new rat mold. It’s an excellent sculpt, and it will surely find a place in LEGO’s general menagerie. Hedwig is the same design featured in the last few waves of sets, beginning in 2010.

While it’s not precisely a creature, the Sorting Hat is definitely a character. Rather than a standard LEGO wizard’s hat with a printed face as the previous version from 2010, the new Sorting Hat is a sculpted hat that matches its on-screen appearance perfectly.

Conclusion and recommendation

Hogwarts Great Hall isn’t a perfectly accurate recreation of the architecture and layout of Hogwarts, and it doesn’t need to be. None of us could afford it if it were truly scaled properly, as demonstrated by seeing a true minifigure-scale Hogwarts. However, the set does an excellent job of giving the impression of Hogwarts, taking us into the rows of students and professors hungrily dining in the Great Hall, and highlighting our favorite moments from the early films with a series of tiny vignettes in the tower. The dining room is wonderfully detailed given the scale, and the exterior of the Great Hall is the most accurate LEGO version yet.

The set’s minifigure selection is excellent. Most adult collectors with an interest in the theme will have a Harry Potter minifigure already, but few will have Quirrell. Susan Bones brings Hufflepuff representation for the first time, and the new Hagrid is miles better than the old versions. The students look great in their most junior years. The Basilisk is terrible, but it’s easily overlooked by simply recycling it into its constituent bricks for use in better models. The other creatures range from adequate to adorable.

Ultimately, despite a few small missteps, this is an excellent set. There’s lots of play value, and it looks splendid as a display model from any angle. The large collection of minifigures helps the $99 price seem a lot more reasonable, and the plethora of new elements is sure to make any parts monkey giddy. If you love Harry Potter, or just want a huge assortment of new elements in a single set, you’re sure to love 75954 Hogwarts Great Hall.

75954 Hogwarts Great Hall has 878 pieces and retails for $99.99 USD. It is available now in the USA, and will be available beginning Aug. 1 elsewhere. You can support The Brothers Brick by purchasing it through these retailers:
LEGO Shop Online (USA | UK), eBay, Bricklink, Amazon

Check out our other reviews of the 2018 Wizarding World sets:
LEGO Harry Potter 75956 Quidditch Match
LEGO Harry Potter BrickHeadz 41615 Harry Potter & Hedwig

View all the images from this review below.












Hello Harry Potter fans!

Do you remember when you discovered Harry Potter?

Wizarding World Universal

I was boarding a plane the day Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire was released. My friends and I spotted a little girl reading that big book. A week later, we had a long layover on the way home. I bought Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone and binge-read it on the plane.

The next day, I bought the 2nd, 3rd and 4th books. A few months later, I met my husband and we eventually read all seven books aloud together. I have re-read all the books, seen all the movies and have introduced Harry Potter to my two kids. We are fans.

When my family visited Orlando last fall, The Wizarding World of Harry Potter at Universal Orlando Resort was our top priority. Here's what you need to know about this fun family destination.

Hogsmeade is the original Wizarding World of Harry Potter at Universal Orlando. J. K. Rowling was involved in its development and the attention to detail is impressive.

Rides

Harry Potter and the Forbidden Journey is the major attraction in Hogsmeade. The line for this ride winds through Hogwarts Castle, and it's an experience on its own. You'll board a 4-person carrier and fly with Harry Potter on an adventurous and enchanted journey through Hogwarts Castle and the Forbidden Forest. Watch out for dementors and giant spiders!

The minimum height requirement is 48 inches/122 cm. Guests with waistlines over 40 inches may not fit in the seats. There is a test seat at the front of the line.

Use the single rider line or consider purchasing Express Pass to avoid long waits for this ride. Wait times shouldn't be too bad right after the park opens, and you will want to take your time in the queue the first time. It's full of movie memorabilia, magical surprises and the video that sets up the ride's story.

If you are carrying a day pack or purse, you'll be required to use a free locker near the entrance to the ride. Forbidden Journey turns you upside down and every other direction. I nearly lost my phone on this ride when it slid from my hip pocket. The lockers are a hassle, so I recommend leaving bags at your hotel room and using lanyards or clothing with zipper pockets to secure personal items.

Flight of the Hippogriff is a family coaster. It's a fun coaster for kids, but you won't miss an essential Harry Potter experience if you skip it.

Food

The Three Broomsticks is the place to be at mealtime. It features traditional English cuisine with speedy counter service. Lines can be long, so eat early or late for shorter wait times.

You can't go to The Wizarding World of Harry Potter without trying Butterbeer or pumpkin juice. Buy them from carts along the cobblestone streets or inside the Hogs Head tavern. There are several varieties, and frozen Butterbeer is my favorite. My family gets one of everything to share.

Shopping

Wands are a favorite souvenir at The Wizarding World of Harry Potter. Ollivander's offers has a short demonstration where the wand chooses the wizard – someone from your family could be chosen.

Hogwarts Harry Potter Online

Consider purchasing an interactive wand that will do spells in the shop windows of Hogsmeade and Diagon Alley. The interactive Snape wand my son bought in California worked in Florida.

Other shops include Honeyduke's, Dervish and Banges, Filch's Emporium of Confiscated Goods and Owl Post. If you want cool souvenirs from any of the Hogwarts houses, Hogsmeade is the place to get them. My daughter wears her Hufflepuff sweatshirt all the time.

Moaning Myrtle haunts the bathrooms in Hogsmeade (not Diagon Alley,) so be sure to stop in during your visit.

Hogsmeade at Universal Orlando is practically identical to the new Hogsmeade at Universal Studios Hollywood in California. We have visited both and the experience is nearly the same.

Diagon Alley is the newest addition to The Wizarding World of Harry Potter in Orlando. It has a hidden entrance inside Universal Studios Florida. We walked past it once or twice before we figured it out. Our jaws dropped and our eyes were wide when we stepped into Diagon Alley the first time.

Rides

The only ride at Diagon Alley is Harry Potter and the Escape from Gringotts. This is a fast-moving ride with 3D and 4D effects through the vaults at Gringotts Bank.

Like Forbidden Journey, there is a lot to see in line, and it's an experience on its own. Single rider, Express Pass and riding right after the park opens are good ways to cut your wait time for this ride. Lockers are required for all bags.

Unlike Forbidden Journey, you'll stay right side up on this coaster-like ride. Escape from Gringotts may be better for younger children and people with motion sickness. The minimum height is 42 inches/107 cm.

Dining

The Leaky Cauldron is the place to find a hearty English meal in Diagon Alley. The setup is similar to The Three Broomsticks in Hogsmeade. You'll find Butterbeer and pumpkin juice in Diagon Alley too.

Our favorite place to eat that you can only find in Diagon Alley is Florean Fortescue's Ice Cream Parlour. You'll get big scoops of unique flavors like Butterbeer, Sticky Toffee Pudding and Earl Grey with Lavender. My husband and I ordered Clotted Cream and Chocolate Chili. They were so rich and so good!

Pottermore

Shopping

Diagon Alley has more shops than Hogsmeade, and they are all so fun. Weasley's Wizarding Wheezes is the first one you'll see. There are two wand shops, including Ollivander's. My son loved Magical Menagerie. Don't miss Borgin and Burkes in Knockturn Alley, especially if you fancy the Dark Arts.

The Hogwarts Express connects Diagon Alley with Hogsmeade and you must have a Park-to-Park Pass if you want to ride it. The line from Diagon Alley winds through a replica of Kings Cross Station. I loved the optical illusion where people ahead of us disappeared into the wall at Platform 9 3/4. There are lots of great photo ops.

Once on the train, you'll be seated in a compartment that looks just like the Hogwarts Express in the movies. The outside window screen shows scenery students would see from the Hogwarts Express. You'll see shadows and hear voices of Harry, Ron and Hermione outside your compartment window.

Lines for the Hogwarts Express can be long and our Express Pass cut our wait time in the afternoon. I understand that lines from Hogsmeade to Diagon Alley are generally shorter, but you won't get the full Kings Cross experience.

Hogwarts Harry Potter Lego

The Hogwarts Express was one of my favorite experiences at The Wizarding World of Harry Potter. I don't generally recommend spending extra on park hopper tickets, but I recommend that you buy a Park-to-Park ticket at Universal Orlando for the Hogwarts Express. Harry Potter fans won't want to miss it.

Universal Orlando Resort has three major theme parks, plus CityWalk. There is enough on-site entertainment to fill 3-5 days, and multi-day tickets get less expensive per day with every day you add. There is only about $10 difference between a 4-Day ticket and a 5-Day ticket.

For my family, Universal Orlando Resort and Walt Disney World are separate vacations because there is just too much to do at both. Our money goes farther when we stick to just one per trip.

Another way to save money on Universal Orlando tickets is to buy from my partner, Get Away Today Vacations. Get Away Today sells discounted tickets for Universal Orlando and Walt Disney World. They are a full-service agency with Orlando experts that can also help you book the perfect vacation for your family.

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There are lots of ticket options, read the fine print to make sure you get the ticket you want. Remember to purchase a Park-to-Park ticket if you want to ride the Hogwarts Express. Buy a 3-Park ticket if you want to visit Universal's new water park, Volcano Bay.

Click the button below to check ticket prices and options at Get Away Today.

My family loved the Wizarding World of Harry Potter at Universal Orlando. We hope you will too!

Disclosure: Universal Orlando Resort provided my family with complimentary park admission and Express Pass Unlimited for the purpose of review. All opinions are my own.

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Hi there! I am the founder of Tips for Family Trips. I am a married mom of two children, ages 11 and 14, living near Salt Lake City, Utah. We took our first child on a two-week road trip when she was four weeks old and we have been traveling as a family ever since. We love to get out of the house to see and do fun things, both far away and in our own neighborhood.