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Today we continue with a very quick tour of the contents of the LEGO Harry Potter set. 76441 Hogwarts Castle: Dueling Club, a small box of 158 pieces which has been available since January 1, 2025 on the official online store at the public price of €24,99.
I didn't think much of this product with its limited inventory and its public price a priori much too high for what the box really has to offer but looking more closely I almost found something to find excuses for LEGO. Well almost, knowing that this product does not allow you to do much as it is without at least associating it with the set 76435 Hogwarts Castle: The Great Hall (€199,99) in which it can be used instead of the usual fittings in the Great Hall.
So here we get a "combat platform" on which the characters provided will be able to fight in a duel. The outcome of the fight is materialized by the possibility of ejecting one of the two minifigs staged via a very simple mechanism. We push and that's it.
And it's meager for €25. Some will happily settle for it, we know that fans of the Harry Potter universe know, like those of Star Wars, how to show indulgence sometimes bordering on bad faith when it comes to liking a product that doesn't necessarily deserve it, I am also one of them on certain products from the LEGO Star Wars range.
We can console ourselves with the absence of stickers in this box, the possibility of obtaining four minifigs and one of the 14 portraits to collect and exchange with your friends.
As for the minifigs provided, LEGO does rather well with two duels to reproduce: Snape against Lockhart and Harry against Draco and his snake. Snape or Snape is delivered here with the torso also available since 2024 in the set 76431 Hogwarts Castle: Potions Class (€39,99) and the legs of Nick Fury or Lucius Malfoy.
The two young students with short legs are in outfits already seen in other boxes and only Gilderoy Lockhart is left to save the day with a nice new torso and a rigid cape that really gives the figurine some character. Bravo to LEGO for the progressive generalization of these pretty capes that are less "cheap" than the flexible fabric versions.
In short, it's hard to see anything here other than what's really there: an extension to the current version of the Hogwarts playset with a bit of playability along the way. The youngest will have a bit of fun ejecting one of the duelists by pushing on the outgrowth provided on the edge of the platform, the others will add Lockhart in their Ribba frames and store the other three characters with their other versions in double or triple.
Fortunately, Amazon has already had time to lower the price of this product, which probably doesn't deserve to be paid at full price for a single, truly unique and attractive minifig.
If you've set out to collect everything related to the new Hogwarts playset reboot, it's hard to ignore it, even if the contents of the set can only temporarily replace the existing installations within the Great Hall and will therefore have a little trouble finding a permanent place in the best.
LEGO Harry Potter 76441 Hogwarts Castle: Dueling Club
Note: The product shown here, provided by LEGO, is as usual involved. Deadline fixed at March 21, 2025 at 23:59 pm. Just post a comment under the article to participate. Your participation is taken into account regardless of your opinion. Avoid "I'm participating" or "I'm trying my luck", we suspect that this is the case.
Update : The winner was drawn and notified by email, his nickname is indicated below.
| CubeV - Comment posted the 13/03/2025 at 8:51 |
Today we quickly take a look at the contents of the LEGO Harry Potter set 76447 Hogwarts Castle: Flying Lessons, a box of 651 pieces available since January 1, 2025 at the public price of €79,99.
As you already know, this product is a new extension of the umpteenth reboot of Hogwarts in a LEGO playset version and the manufacturer even promises us that the construction composed of modules already marketed and to come will be "the most detailed produced to date". It will of course be necessary to go back to the checkout multiple times to be able to afford all the walls and scenes to integrate into the promised diorama.
For this time, we therefore obtain a section of Hogwarts Castle which contains the Quidditch equipment room, the Transfiguration classroom, Professor McGonagall's office and the trophy room. The compact tower which makes you wonder where our €80 is can be deployed to have fun with it, but even spread out in its entirety, the construction with its basic finish struggles a little to justify its price.
We will especially remember the "modular" side of the thing with the possibility of removing two interior sections to replace them with something else like for example the classroom of the spells course of the set 76442 Hogwarts Castle: Charms Class (€19,99). It's a good idea, even if you have to choose between the modules, and this feature allows LEGO to multiply the small boxes at €20 while still having the alibi of being able to really integrate them into the overall diorama.
For the rest, the set is still very basic and only the most assiduous fans will see it as a playset that allows you to replay a Quidditch lesson. Many fans have the ambition to collect the entirety of this new version of the playset inaugurated by the reference 76435 Hogwarts Castle: The Great Hall (€199,99) with the aim of obtaining an imposing exhibition model on a minifig scale, we don't know how many will still be motivated at the end of the project knowing that LEGO will not fail to reboot the concept once again. At this stage, you must already acquire the products below to start obtaining the complete diorama:
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I'll let you calculate the budget needed to please the little one who dreams of having the ultimate playset on his bedroom carpet; there's reason to regret that he's not a Fortnite fan instead.
We will console ourselves for this time with McGonagall's micro-office, the "room" grouping together the equipment necessary for learning Quidditch, the class of the Transfiguration course with its really very basic benches as well as a "room" of particularly symbolic trophies. For those who are interested, the collection of 14 portraits in the form of Tiles Collectible pad printed continues in 2025 with two copies delivered in this box.
Everything is here summarized in its simplest expression, it had to fit in the tower. Those who will exhibit the product without ever touching it again will have on hand some transparent rods to put the students in flight position, it's always something. At this stage we cannot speak of real playability, the proposal will not exceed two minutes to make the students fly on next to their respective brooms.
In short, nothing to get up at night if you take this product out of context. As part of the overall project to obtain "the most detailed version to date" of Hogwarts, the tower is not essential, it is not designed to be connected to the rest. Unless LEGO one day comes up with a Quidditch pitch to place between the buildings.
On the minifig side, the set is a bit shy here even if we get a nice version of Madam Hooch (Bibine) with a very successful double face. McGonagall lacks pad printing on the skirt, Oliver Wood (Dubois) is frankly generic despite an unpublished torso but so banal that we will probably find him elsewhere until we are thirsty.
The three students logically in first year version with short and fixed legs, (Harry Potter, Neville Longbottom and Draco Malfoy) are equipped with pieces already seen many times in the Harry Potter range. We feel once again the desire to limit costs with neutral legs for everyone.
It is obvious here that LEGO is once again capitalizing on the collection effect linked to the possibility of one day obtaining a big luxury playset for spoiled children, there is little effort on some of the dissociated elements of the range and whatever the level of the proposal, it will be necessary with it if we really want to complete the diorama. This relative trapping of fans will be perceived differently depending on the degree of affinity with the license, the most assiduous will be as always the most indulgent.
LEGO has also flooded the Amazon Testers Club with free products to ensure a positive rating and boost sales of this box that is too expensive for what it really has to offer, so we need to keep the pressure on everyone who is on their way to the full diorama, even with the least charismatic products. In any case, we will at least wait to be able to buy this box for much less than its retail price elsewhere than at LEGO.
LEGO Harry Potter 76447 Hogwarts Castle: Flying Lessons
Note: The product shown here, provided by LEGO, is as usual involved. Deadline fixed at February 25, 2025 at 23:59 pm. Just post a comment under the article to participate. Your participation is taken into account regardless of your opinion. Avoid "I'm participating" or "I'm trying my luck", we suspect that this is the case.
Update : The winner was drawn and notified by email, his nickname is indicated below.
| Brick Cookie - Comment posted the 20/02/2025 at 12:51 |
Today we take a very quick look at the contents of the LEGO Harry Potter set. 76443 Hagrid & Harry's Motorcycle Ride, a box of 617 pieces available from LEGO since January 1, 2025 at the public price of €49,99 and logically sold for a little less elsewhere.
I might as well tell you right away, I'm not very enthusiastic about this proposal, even if I welcome the risk-taking, the exercise being complicated. The scale of the whole is a priori determined by the wheels of the motorcycle and the designer tried to build the rest while respecting the proportions of the two characters staged here.
Why not, except that the faces of Hagrid and Harry Potter suffer precisely from the imposed scale and are reduced in one case to a pile of pieces which struggle to embody Hagrid's face and in the other to a simple pad-printed piece which should in principle embody Harry Potter's face.
In both cases, I think it's far too symbolic or confusing to convince. The bias in the construction of Hagrid's head could possibly pass for an exercise in artistic style that everyone would be free to appreciate, but Harry Potter's face is so minimalistic that it detracts from the overall appearance of the product.
On the pad printing side, LEGO could have taken the trouble to pad print the outline of Hagrid's glasses, just to limit the damage and to embellish a face that lacks a little personality and Harry has no mouth. It was almost enough for the young student's face to be more detailed to make the pill easier to swallow.
For the rest, the bike is convincing with its product look that could come from the LEGO Creator universe and the machine offers a few entertaining minutes during its construction. The most assiduous fans may find in this set an exhibition product that pays homage to the saga, but we feel the wringing of the Harry Potter universe until thirst is no longer there, even if it means taking risks by dealing with a franchise in which vehicles, one of the chestnuts of LEGO production, are not legion.
This product stands out at least for its originality, it is already almost an achievement for a range that is starting to go round in circles on the same subjects and we cannot blame LEGO for its desire to renew itself and to try to seduce with new and sometimes surprising proposals outside the classics that must be kept in the catalog like Hogwarts or Diagon Alley.
Was it really necessary to stage Hagrid and Harry in this way with an approach that was both a bit crude but also minimalist? Nothing is less certain. LEGO obviously knew that the product was likely to have trouble finding its audience, the manufacturer for example flooded the "Testers Club"Amazon free boxes to ensure a wave of positive comments and a convincing rating.
If you like this set, patience should allow you to get it at a very competitive price in the coming months. It will inevitably end up in clearance somewhere, that's the fate of these boxes with divisive content that only attract a fraction of the usual clientele, no matter how passionate they are about the universe in question.
LEGO Harry Potter 76443 Hagrid & Harry's Motorcycle Ride
Note: The product shown here, provided by LEGO, is as usual involved. Deadline fixed at January 30, 2025 at 23:59 pm. Just post a comment under the article to participate. Your participation is taken into account regardless of your opinion. Avoid "I'm participating" or "I'm trying my luck", we suspect that this is the case.
Update : The winner was drawn and notified by email, his nickname is indicated below.
| Beurger - Comment posted the 22/01/2025 at 18:22 |
Today we take a very quick look at the contents of the LEGO Harry Potter set. 76453 Malfoy Manor, a box of 1601 pieces available since January 1, 2025 at the public price of €149,99. Speaking of shopping around, it's best not to go around the product offered here too much at the risk of being a little disappointed...
The main construction of the set is indeed a paradox in itself: it offers a rather detailed facade with some nice techniques and a very acceptable rendering for a playset intended for the youngest, the interior of the manor could also almost convince with the necessary furniture and other decorative elements but it is by observing this "manor" from the side that we realize that we must once again be content with a simple cinema set without real depth.
We know that LEGO generally does not hesitate to play on the depth of its constructions to limit the inventory but this example will be a landmark as this mansion is surprisingly fine. It would have been necessary to title this product differently so as not to put the building at the center of the set and make it only a simple element of the promised playability.
The facade is, as I said above, detailed with some interesting architectural finds. It is of a very good level and we find most of the significant attributes seen on the screen, even if everything is often summarized in a rather symbolic way. Inside the places, LEGO makes use of the available space by filling spaces with a very limited surface area and even finds a solution to add some playability elements by extending the playset beyond the walls of the manor.
So we end up with a large room that overflows into the void and two very basic staircases to allow access to it. LEGO sells us these stairs as an access to the cellar of the place with its cells, but this one is actually on the same level as the entrance to the mansion. It's confusing.
Children who will actually play with this playset (who are they?) will probably see in this extension of the space which in principle allows for a bit of fun a solution facilitating the installation of the figurines provided but it is far from the opulent dollhouse. I would like to point out in passing that the recurring joke at LEGO which consists of integrating toilets into almost all the buildings falls flat here in my opinion. These toilets in fact occupy a room which could have been devoted to something else and the available spaces are not really legion in this construction.
For €150, one could legitimately hope for better than this simple façade, certainly inspired but much too thin to embody a manor that gives its name to the product. The independent portal does not save the day even if it allows to give a little depth artificially to the scene.
This place, which still plays an important role in the Harry Potter saga, probably deserved better than this rickety playset without much interest in terms of play, and it is the architecture of the place that should have been highlighted instead of trying to reproduce the different spaces that host scenes seen on screen. No one will really play at knocking down the chandelier, locking Harry and his friends in or questioning Hermione in the main room. I really want to meet these children who will spend a few hours reproducing these scenes after their parents have spent €150.
In my opinion, we should frankly choose between one approach or the other instead of trying to combine the two in a playset ersatz whose only noteworthy feature is its finesse, which smells of saving on parts. LEGO's wringing out of the Harry Potter universe with the desire to flood the shelves with numerous products at least twice a year is also responsible for what we get here.
This product would have required a much larger inventory to resemble the idea that we could have of it, but each wave of sets sees the planned references positioned in their respective price ranges and here it was necessary to stay around €150. At this price and with nine figurines in the box, it is difficult to expect more than what LEGO offers us.
The minifig endowment is indeed quite substantial here with Harry Potter, Hermione Granger, Bellatrix Lestrange, Draco Malfoy, Lucius Malfoy, Narcissa Malfoy, Luna Lovegood, Lord Voldemort and Dobby. These figurines are well executed and those that benefit from a new torso are graphically very successful. Collectors will have here some new characters to get their hands on, those who even line up the variants of characters seen and reviewed will be in heaven.
Draco, who is the only one to reuse a torso already seen, is here delivered with his parents Lucius and Narcissa, Bellatrix Lestrange benefits from a new torso frankly successful and even allows herself the luxury of being the only one to be equipped with pad-printed legs, Voldemort, Harry, Hermione, Dobby and Luna Lovegood are also new in this form. Many fans will come to the usual inevitable conclusion: with so many minifigures and a majority of them being new, LEGO has necessarily made concessions elsewhere in the product and it is logically the manor that pays the price.
It is not with this box that I will change my mind about the current policy at LEGO which would consist of surrounding a large handful of pretty new figurines with a few pieces because the manufacturer has understood what makes its products sell in mass, the mansion to be built here is ultimately only a luxury setting for the characters sold in this box which nevertheless bears its name without even a mention of the type "Adventures in Malfoy Manor" For example.
We can console ourselves by saying that this is still the first time that the place has benefited from such treatment and that the door is now open to reissues and other more or less opulent interpretations of the building. The architecture of the manor would almost justify an adult version with fewer toilets and more walls, we may be entitled to it one day.
In the meantime, it is the minifig endowment that pulls the product up here despite a facade that seems very successful to me for a simple playset intended for children. Out of the question to spend €150 for that, the product will sooner or later end up being available for much less elsewhere than at LEGO.
LEGO Harry Potter 76453 Malfoy Manor
Note: The product shown here, provided by LEGO, is as usual involved. Deadline fixed at January 23, 2025 at 23:59 pm. Just post a comment under the article to participate. Your participation is taken into account regardless of your opinion. Avoid "I'm participating" or "I'm trying my luck", we suspect that this is the case.
Update : The winner was drawn and notified by email, his nickname is indicated below.
| thenab - Comment posted the 19/01/2025 at 1:32 |
Today we quickly take a look at the contents of the LEGO Harry Potter set 76444 Diagon Alley: Wizarding Shops, a box of 2750 pieces that has been available since January 1, 2025 at a public price of €199,99. This product is not exclusive to the official online store and LEGO Stores, it is also available from many retailers.
This Diagon Alley with LEGO Architecture sauce will be on familiar ground here, this product takes up the principle and the minimalist scale with many details which are only symbolized by a simple piece.
As is often the case, you have to be very imaginative to see a possible reference to a detail seen on screen, only those who never miss a rerun of the saga on television will probably be able to mention them all. Others will find here a much more compact version of the places with a pure exhibition product that can be displayed with its "real" layout or in a more linear alignment of 90 cm long that will form a pretty colored frieze on a shelf.
This product is also aimed at all those who have no use for the playsets in the range, whether it is the "luxury" version with the sets 75978 Diagon Alley (449,99 €) and 76417 Gringotts Wizarding Bank Collector's Edition (€429,99) or children's versions via the sets 76422 Diagon Alley Weasleys' Wizard Wheezes (94,99 €) and 76439 Ollivanders & Madam Malkin's Dresses (89,99 €).
This set allows you to get rid of the subject for €200 and in an exhaustive manner but by agreeing to skip the minifigs to be satisfied with the nanofigs delivered here. This box does better than the promotional set 40289 Diagon Alley offered from 80 € of purchase in November 2018, a small box which was then content with the bare minimum on an even smaller scale than the proposal available here.
The assembly of the product may seem laborious to those who have never had in their hands a set of the Architecture range. The inventory of 2750 pieces is mainly composed of small elements with the exception of a few plates which serve as a base for the various modules and you have to be very patient and meticulous to obtain something recognizable. There are still a whole bunch of Spare Parts on arrival, so much so that we sometimes wonder if we haven't forgotten to put some elements in place.
LEGO provides five instruction booklets so that the experience can be shared by several people, each assembling their shops before putting the tower together in the desired configuration. There are no stickers in this box, so all the patterned elements are pad printed.
The different shops are well identified throughout the pages of the booklets but in my opinion there are some missing explanations on certain references that would have deserved to be better documented. The assembly will only take place once and it is better to maximize the flavor before resigning yourself to forgetting the construction on the corner of a shelf.
As far as I can tell and being lenient due to the scale of the thing, the street seems pretty complete and faithful to me and the facades are easily recognizable. I'm less enthusiastic about the other side of each of the modules with interiors that are probably full of winks intended for the most assiduous fans but whose finishing often remains very basic. Once again, the scale used does not allow for certain fantasies and you will have to make do if you choose to expose the street by aligning the modules in their "real" configuration.
On the side of the dozen nanofigs provided (microfigures according to LEGO), it is as often in this format very approximate at the level of the pad printing. We can see the glass half empty or half full on this point but I find the result a little disappointing even if we will not zoom in on the different characters who are only there to populate the diorama seen from afar.
We can pretty much recognize Harry Potter, Hermione Granger, Ron Weasley, Fred Weasley, George Weasley, Lavender Brown, Ginny Weasley, Draco Malfoy, Narcissa Malfoy, Mr. Borjow, Garrick Ollivander and Madam Malkin but the ink is really smearing in places. You will be allowed to lose one of these figurines, they all come in duplicate in the box.
If you have already fallen for the set 76419 Hogwarts Castle & Grounds (€169,99) because you wanted to have a definitive, compact and still sufficiently detailed version of Hogwarts without playing with it, this new set in the same vein is made for you. It is a good summary of the subject treated with easily identifiable shops and a convincing staging if you present the different modules in their most realistic configuration.
By spending the €200 requested by LEGO, you remove the headache about this iconic street and you can move on without being burdened with playsets with less comprehensive content and more or less finished. The downside: this product does not allow you to obtain any minifigs and it has nothing playable contrary to the promise that LEGO makes in the description of the box. It is really the assembly of the thing that must immerse you in the atmosphere of the universe that you like more than the fact of then exposing a street with its facades facing each other and whose interior spaces with a somewhat approximate finish will remain clearly visible.
As you will have understood, I remain mixed on the proposal: I find it relevant because it deals with the subject in a very applied way but I wonder if the subject in question really deserved this type of treatment with the inevitable compromises and shortcuts that the scale implies. In any case, €200 for that is a bit expensive and don't oppose me with the price per piece to try to find a reasonable side to the price of this box, 80% of the content of this product is only made up of small 1x1 pieces.
This product is fortunately not exclusive to the official store and will soon be available for much less elsewhere than at LEGO. It will then be time to re-evaluate the interest of such a set.
LEGO Harry Potter 76444 Diagon Alley: Wizarding Shops
Note: The product shown here, provided by LEGO, is as usual involved. Deadline fixed at January 16, 2025 at 23:59 pm. Just post a comment under the article to participate. Your participation is taken into account regardless of your opinion. Avoid "I'm participating" or "I'm trying my luck", we suspect that this is the case.
Update : The winner was drawn and notified by email, his nickname is indicated below.
| Stanevan32 - Comment posted the 06/01/2025 at 18:29 |
- Rick : Aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa...
- 39pop39 I'm perfecting the original!!!...
- Asgard66 Too many stickers...not for me...
- Ecta Pretty nice, but too many stickers!
- euskadi37 And above all, thank you to the amazing AFOLs who take on other AFOLs...
- Jack63 They could make a version without the characters. Like...
- Jack63 It's true, he's nice in this version. Damn, that's...
- max18 Better than the first one, the red outfit is superb...
- Jack63 The whole system needs to be reviewed: expensive premises, taxes...
- Ben Truck : Lol, sorry, but those figures are completely wrong...
LEGO Speed Champions McLaren W1 - Toy Car - Model Kit with Collectible Driver Minifigure - Birthday Gift Idea for Boys Aged 9+
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LEGO Speed Champions McLaren W1 - Toy Car - Model Kit with Collectible Driver Minifigure - Birthday Gift Idea for Boys Aged 9+











































