Epic Brick Adventures has reached the part of a crowdfunding cycle where the timing actually matters. When I rechecked the official Kickstarter page on June 8, it showed $109,165 pledged, 1,223 backers, 6 updates, 71 comments, and 27 hours to go before the campaign closes on June 9 at 3:00 PM EDT.
That is enough to make this a real final-day buyer check instead of another empty “it funded” note. The sharper reason to care is the latest campaign move: a June 8 update saying the Deck of Creatures, also called the Deck of MUC for Monsters of Unusual Construction, has now been unlocked.
The final-day hook is real, but keep the labels clean
The official pitch is straightforward. Tinker Troll Games calls Epic Brick Adventures a tabletop role-playing game where players become a MiniHero in a world built from plastic bricks. That wording matters, because the project is clearly leaning on the brick-building fantasy without offering any basis to imply an official LEGO license or partnership.
The funding signal is real either way. Kickstarter’s browser-rendered page showed the project above $109K in USD-equivalent display, while the campaign’s CAD-denominated tracking context sat around C$152K against a C$25K goal in the same June 8 source pass. The clean read is not that one number is “right” and the other is “wrong.” It is that readers should treat the visible page total and the underlying campaign currency as two different labels for the same live push.
This works better as a practical crowdfunding check than as a hype piece
A lot of final-day tabletop coverage falls apart because it adds no useful answer beyond deadline panic. This one clears that bar. The campaign page does more than show a big number and a countdown. It also exposes a visible reward structure that includes digital, printed, all-in, and build-your-own bundle paths, plus dedicated Shipping and Risks sections that buyers should actually read before treating the last day like a free-roll impulse click.
The comments are useful in a narrow way too. They do not show broad consensus, and there is no honest reason to fake one. What they do show is that backers are asking practical questions about the newly unlocked creature deck: whether it is included in specific reward paths, and how it works as an add-on. That is a much more believable final-day signal than generic “the community is excited” filler.
The stretch-goal update gives the deadline one more reason to matter
The Deck of Creatures / Deck of MUC update is the cleanest same-day development in the package. It turns the last-day angle into more than timing theater, because the campaign is still changing while the clock is running. If you were already curious about Epic Brick Adventures, that matters more than another recycled funding-percentage boast.
That still does not make this a verdict. There is no first-hand GameGuideDog play basis here, no fulfillment guarantee, and no honest path from a funded campaign to “this will definitely be great.” Kickstarter’s own trust language is blunt about that: rewards are not guaranteed, even when creators are expected to keep backers updated.
What actually changes for backers now
The useful conclusion is pretty simple. Epic Brick Adventures has enough real weight to justify a final-day check: more than 1,200 backers, a six-figure visible funding line, a fresh stretch-goal unlock, and a live deadline close enough that waiting is finally a decision.
What I would not do is confuse that with a license signal or a finished-product verdict. This is a brick-building indie tabletop campaign with real momentum, not an official LEGO release, and not a reviewed game.
That leaves the honest read: Epic Brick Adventures looks like a stronger final-day Kickstarter story than most because the campaign is still moving, the buyer-facing package is clear, and the backer heat is big enough to matter.
For more tabletop coverage, visit our board-games lane, revisit the recent Vampire Survivors board game late-pledge check, read the Earthborne Trailblazer Kickstarter breakout piece, or catch the earlier Let’s Go! To France campaign watch.