ironically) by Hamas (although Benjamin Netanyahu is surely challenging that now), and in which the head of a national oil company chaired the United Nations Climate Change Conference. Which means we’re still all going to cook or drown, to the surprise of absolutely no-one.

In fact 2023 was the hottest year ever recorded for the earth’s surface temperature, but was it hot for The Lego Car Blog too? Let’s find out…

exactly level from 2022 to 2023. Our viewing figures are directly linked to the amount of content we publish, and we’ve realised that – impressive though seven-figures annually are – we’re much too lazy to keep that pace going. Hopefully we’re publishing enough to keep you all interested (337 posts in 2023), whilst ensuring there’s balance away from writing.

The Lego Car Blog’s readers came from almost every country on earth, led by the U.S, Germany, U.K, Netherlands and Canada, whilst fourteen countries supplied just a single visitor. The most popular post of the year was ‘That’ Toyota Supra, with the Review Library, our 2024 Speed Champions preview, and the Technic 42154 Ford GT set preview also pulling in big numbers.

What’s Next?

If the online Lego Community keeps creating amazing vehicles, then we’ll keep publicising them! We might also finally complete Master MOCers Series II, with just two spaces remaining after Thirdwigg joined the Hall of Fame in 2023, and we’ll probably try to review a few things too.

We continue to be amazed just how many of you want to read the nonsense we write, and if your views and clicks earn a little revenue that we can donate to those more deserving than we are, then that’s all the motivation we need.

Thank you for visiting, if you’d like to get in touch with us you can either leave a comment or send us a message via the Contact Page, and we’ll see you in 2024.

TLCB Team