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Topic: Toyze makes custom 3D-printed figures from mobile games

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Toyze makes custom 3D-printed figures from mobile games
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Toyze is announcing today that it will let mobile gamers use 3D printing to create custom figurines based on their favorite mobile game characters, starting with Om Nom from the Cut the Rope series.To get more news about custom figurine, you can visit koalaprint.com official website.

Toyze, a Lithuanian startup created by GetJar founder Ilja Laurs, is creating the first “app store” for 3D printed mobile game characters. Zeptolab, the maker of Cut the Rope, is the first announced partner that will allow its game characters to be re-created as physical toy figurines. Using the free Toyze app for iOS and Android, players can create their own custom poses using a touchscreen interface.
Laurs said in an exclusive interview with GamesBeat that he believes 3D printing will become a revolution and that Toyze wants to deliver one of the first game-related services for mobile users. Over time, Laurs said he is excited about what could happen in the future with 3D printing of toys. But it will take a while before 3D printers are in every home.

There is some competition. Figure Prints, founded by former Microsoft game chief Ed Fries, allows players to re-create physical versions of their favorite World of Warcraft and Minecraft creations. But Laurs hopes to get the jump on creating a simple, touch-based app aimed at a mobile audience. Laurs said the physical toys will be high-quality, high-resolution 3D figurines.

Laurs started the company as part of an early stage investment fund he created in Lithuania, using the money he made from GetJar, a successful mobile app marketplace. Zeptolab, whose games have been downloaded more than 500 million times, liked the idea so much that it became an investor and gave Toyze permission to create characters based on Cut the Rope and Cut the Rope 2. The price of the character is based on the size that you order. A 2-inch plastic version of Om Nom will cost about $8, while a 2.5-inch model costs $15. An 8.5-inch figure is the current size limit.

“We’ve partnered with Toyze because they have the most cutting-edge technology and an easy-to-use app where your favorite game characters can be customized and ordered to be 3D-printed and delivered to your doorstep — on demand, from a game, straight from your mobile device,” said Misha Lyalin, CEO of Zeptolab, in a statement. “We invested, because just like ZeptoLab, many game developers will find that partnering with Toyze is a great way to provide brand extension and one more revenue stream.”

“I spent half a year learning what 3D printing is now capable of,” he said. “It’s amazing what you can already do. It’s very advanced. In Europe, you can buy a home 3D printer for 100 euros. It’s easy to see how in the next five years, everybody will have a 3D printer in the home, like they have microwave ovens now.”

He added, “You will be able to walk up to it in the future and print your own Superman. And nobody else in the world will have exactly the same toy.”

Laurs plans to create his business with the cooperation of brand owners like Zeptolab, which can profit through the relationship from an additional revenue stream.



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