Yes, I mean you, too, strange island-dweller.
Seeing you mentioning orb-related things (meridian) and me being the central continental type of European, I'm itching to make a remark as to the nature of English penalty kicking,
Makes no bones to me. The traditional podal extremity sphere-shifting game generally passes me by as much as (apparently) said sphere does the guy in charge of the English fishing net structure. My Dad enthuses about the spheroid-based game with the H-shaped bars at the end (and can even tell the difference between the "Hooligan's game played by gentlemen" and "Hooligan's game played by hooligans" versions). There's the little sphere propulsed towards the sticks in the ground game, as well, which largely unphases me.
Sportwise, I'm most closely aligned to velocipede racing, but the Time Trial versions, not the massed start stuff that's more common on the continent. And my personal involvement is in the capacity of officialdom (usually one of the the guys with the watches, but I'm as happy to stand with my arm outstretched at junctions) rather than participation. Now, talking of bicycles. Dunlop and others, who are probably way underappreciated for their developments, can be added to your list of European/British contributors.
...your reference to the "LEGO" thing: Hey, I grew up with that. And my creations were even more colorful as my first architectural projects in DF.
Colourful?[1] Sorry, but
my creations were never colourful. Not necessarily monochromatic, but I don't think I
ever built a model that was a hotch-potch of the white, yellow, red, blue and black[3] bricks. If not monochrome, certainly there'd be some logic (e.g. grey wings and blue body to my space-ships, with yellow nose-cones and red rockets at the rear) and where that was not possible I usually obeyed a reflective symmetry (or rotational, in some less pointy structures.
And it goes that way with my forts. Constructed walls and floors all of a particular colour (actually, particular material, and usually blocks of it, though you wouldn't know under the default graphics set) with perhaps spare orthoclase or another available material of an otherwise unused colour for temporary structures that are to be removed once their access/support purposes are fulfilled.
I'm bogged down a bit with some of my current project-fort, because I can't currently access all the sandstone I want (and want to turn into blocks) due to aquifer-prevalence and a digging plan that precludes simply suffering some minor flooding (because it would flood just about everything for 40 Z-levels or more, below), but the andesite, dacite and diorite (IIRC) elements of the above-ground structures are coming along nicely. I really need to isolate some more precise stone stocks near the mechanics' workshops, though to get a nice subset of equal-quality mechanisms all of the same material in order to fulfil my CDO[4] personality.
(I'll have a look at the Pillar-Fortress later, hjd_uk.)
[1] Actually, didn't mean to highlight your use of the 'Merkin term, in this part of my response but this sort of thing
is how this derail started...
[2] As the most common colours, in those days. Did you know the founder of Lego didn't want green (and brown) bricks, because he didn't want people to make war-things. Indeed, when I first visited Legoland (the original and, at that time, only one, in Billund, Denmark) the decorative artillery pieces in the Buckingham Palace model were
famously made of rare[3] green bricks. Didn't stop people making blue WW1 biplanes or just guns in that self-same multi-coloured mish-mash that I'm railing against. Personally, I used to use the 2x8 flat white bricks used as sleepers for blue rail-track pieces to form a variety of single-coloured constructions, because I could reliably get hold of so many of them, and amongst those (usually planes purposed not specifically towards military ends) were the occasional gun, I suspect.
[3] Excepting the more specialised grass-plates, trees and flower-stalks, which took more than a little imagination to form into guns'n'tanks.
[4] Like OCD, but
in alphabetical order!