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Death Stranding BB Pod Doll Bag

Print Profile(1)

All
P2S
H2S
A2L
H2C
X1 Carbon
P1S
H2D
A1
X1E
P1P
X1
H2D Pro
X2D

0.2mm layer, 2 walls, 15% infill
0.2mm layer, 2 walls, 15% infill
Designer
4.8 h
1 plate

Open in Bambu Studio
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Description

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  1. Model Introduction

    Inspired by Death Stranding BB Pod 3D Printed Doll Bag_Bilibili_bilibili , the uploader on Bilibili probably used BB Death Stranding - Free 3D Print Model - MakerWorld this model. When I recreated it, I found that this model on MakerWorld was segmented, making assembly quite complex, and there were many redundant designs for a doll bag. So I rebuilt this model using Fusion 360, mainly referencing art concept images found online. The connecting parts are directly glued with 5210 adhesive, and there's a protrusion on the back of the main compartment for positioning during adhesion. Feel free to modify and optimize; the engineering files have been uploaded simultaneously.

     

    If you want to hang it on a backpack, you can glue on Outdoor Military Backpack Accessories Molle Buckle Molle System Webbing Connection Clip Backpack Fixed Buckle Hanging Buckle-Taobao.com or a similar backpack buckle.I must say, Hideo Kojima is still too authoritative.

     

    The current default model is adapted for this doll bag Doll Bag Doll Protective Cover Toy Pendant Plushie Protective Cover Chiikawa Doll Bag 20cm Chiikawa Doll Bag-tmall.com Tmall. My measured actual dimensions are closer to 100*80*150 mm. By scaling the model size, the current design should be able to fit all mainstream transparent doll bags.

     

  2. Some Thoughts on Open Source Models

    This Bilibili uploader probably has their own designed version, or perhaps they directly used a model from MakerWorld. Regardless, he publicly launched a group sale of printed models, which sparked considerable controversy. There were many comments in the previous video's comment section questioning the lack of author permission, which now seem to have been deleted by the uploader.

     

    Doing open source in China is indeed a joke; so-called open-source licenses seem to have no legal effect domestically. But then again, is it also an act of IP infringement for me to create a model based on Hideo Kojima's team's art settings and publish it on MakerWorld? Everything is too vague, and there is no regulation. I hope someone knowledgeable in law can explain it.

     

    Personally, I think printing some models oneself and selling them at a stall is a harmless act; who doesn't have an entrepreneurial dream? However, openly conducting commercial activities on the internet seems to be of a different nature. If the source of the model is not credited, or if the models sold are not open-sourced, the exquisite content painstakingly created by the original author becomes a tool for others to profit. Making money is one thing, but I believe what saddens the original author more is that no one knows the work came from them.

 

 

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License

This work is licensed under a Standard Digital File License – Community Use (SDFL‑C).

You shall not share, sub-license, sell, rent, host, transfer, or distribute in any way the digital or 3D printed versions of this object, nor any other derivative work of this object in its digital or physical format (including, but not limited to, publishing derivative works outside the Makerworld platform or hosting on other digital platforms). The objects may not be used without permission in any way whatsoever in which you charge money or collect fees. Subject to the above restrictions, derivative works may be published only within the Makerworld platform, and all such derivative works must be licensed under the same SDFL‑C license, without modification or additional terms. You may download the digital versions of this object, 3D print it, and display images, videos, or usage demonstrations of 3D printed versions of the object on personal social media platforms or Makerworld official channels, provided that no digital versions of the object are shared or distributed.