LEGO licensed sets: What is left to do?

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This week's announcement of the initial LEGO Pokémon sets reminded me of a poll published in 2020. Prompted by the high frequency of new licensed themes at the time, we asked Brickset readers which new licenses they would like to see in the future, as well as which should return.

Almost six years later, new licensed themes and individual sets have continued to be released at speed, including seven of the fifteen options from the original poll. Similarly, two thirds of the mentioned returning licensed properties have indeed returned since 2020, albeit often not in the way many of us expected at the time.

I think it is interesting to look back at those polls and consider what else the future potentially holds, especially since many of the more obvious options identified a few years ago have now happened, perhaps leaving few possibilities.


What new LEGO theme should LEGO produce next?

The results of our original poll, published in March 2020, were as follows:

As you can see, all the top five have since happened in some form, either as a whole theme in the case of Pokémon, or occasional set(s) with the likes of The Legend of Zelda, Star Trek and Transformers. How to Train Your Dragon is represented by a single Icons set as well, while The Adventures of Tintin and Godzilla each have confirmed Ideas sets coming in the future.


What licensed theme should return?

We also asked which past licensed theme should return in April 2020 and the results were as follows:

Again, you will notice that several of the top performers in this poll have indeed returned since 2020. The Lord of the Rings returned with various spectacular Icons sets, while The Simpsons and Pirates of the Caribbean were both reintroduced with Icons sets in 2025. Additionally, there have been two versions of Back to the Future's DeLorean Time Machine released in 2022 and this year, plus 76911 007 Aston Martin DB5, at least one FIFA-based model and the Sonic the Hedgehog theme. Indiana Jones also returned, though frustratingly briefly.

Moreover, potential licensed properties featured in each poll regularly achieve 10,000 votes on LEGO Ideas and quite a few are actually in review right now, including Futurama, Studio Ghibli, Asterix, Avatar: The Last Airbender and the seemingly ever-present Gravity Falls. For several of those, it feels like only a matter of time until they are produced.


What could be next?

Pokémon and Star Trek have always struck me as the most prestigious properties absent from the LEGO product range, which is no longer the case. That does not inevitably make them the most valuable for sales, though Pokémon seems like a sure-fire success, but I think there is a perceived value for The LEGO Group in having access to such iconic properties, which draw in new fans.

However, I would argue that they now have agreements in place with the vast majority of those top-tier properties. There are countless sources to draw from, of course, but probably not many with a significant potential impact, even comparable to Pokémon.

In fact, there are only a few realistic possibilities that come to mind:

Dragon Ball

There has been limited LEGO exploration of manga until the last few years, with the release of LEGO ONE PIECE sets and now Pokémon, with its manga component. Dragon Ball is another one and I can envisage associated LEGO sets, but perhaps ONE PIECE and Pokémon already cover that market.

Studio Ghibli

Studio Ghibli is an iconic animation studio, with a number of celebrated and highly marketable characters. My Neighbour Totoro regularly inspires LEGO Ideas projects that reach the review stage, but none have yet been approved. I think there is potential for more than just one or two sets based on Studio Ghibli properties though. Perhaps a set-up like The Lord of the Rings or The Legend of Zelda is realistic, with occasional, but multiple, 18+ sets.

Hello Kitty

This list has a definite Japanese focus so far, but Hello Kitty is very different to Dragon Ball or Studio Ghibli. I had never considered LEGO Hello Kitty before, but SetToBuild suggested it as an idea and I must say, it sounds plausible. Lots of recent licensed sets show a desire to reach new potential LEGO fans and I believe Hello Kitty could do that.

SpongeBob SquarePants

Strange though it sounds, I think there are similarities between SpongeBob SquarePants and The Lord of the Rings in the context of LEGO sets. LEGO SpongeBob SquarePants originally ran between 2006 and 2012 and evidently had some success, but not enough to become ever-present. The market has since changed though, so I think further play sets and perhaps even 18+ sets are justifiable.

Avatar: The Last Airbender

The same applies to Avatar: The Last Airbender. Two sets were launched in 2006 and without any more to follow, they were presumably not very successful. Again though, the audience for LEGO sets and Avatar: The Last Airbender is totally different today and I am surprised none of the many Ideas projects to reach 10,000 votes have yet been selected. It leads me to wonder whether The LEGO Group has a full theme in mind for Avatar, at some point.

KPop Demon Hunters

I think LEGO KPop Demon Hunters sets are all but guaranteed in some form, especially given the established relationship between The LEGO Group and Netflix. However, unlike the above properties, KPop Demon Hunters is brand new, so its longevity is not necessarily assured. Still, as a fan of the movie myself, I hope to see some LEGO sets!


There are doubtless other possibilities and Huw mentioned Taylor Swift as a potential source to draw from, for instance, although that feels more like a single Ideas set than a consistent theme to me, in the vein of 21339 BTS Dynamite.

Needless to say, I would also love to see more successful original LEGO themes alongside the various licensed sets. I am certainly not advocating for an endless deluge of new licences; I am just wondering how many more there can actually be!

Do you have any other ideas? Let us know in the comments and I may publish another poll, as in 2020, if we receive enough suggestions.

81 comments on this article

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By in United States,

If you have seen the leaks....
Goku Mech 215pcs $79.99
Hello Kitty Brickheadz 76 pcs $44.99
The Krusty Krab 8,601 pcs $1,389.99
KPop Concert Stage 994 pcs $279.99
Again not 100% confirmed but by the supposed metrics these look likely.

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By in Netherlands,

How about less licenses? It makes Lego more and more expensive

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By in Norway,

Lego Red Dead Redemtion. It's time to use that 18+ rating for more than just price gouging

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By in United Kingdom,

Asterix sets for sure would bankrupt me! Playmobil has already got lots of sets of the theme but making it to Lego would help with accessibility to the Roman theme again for MOC builders.

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By in United States,

Doctor Who, Gravity Falls, and classic TRON would be really nice to own, along with more Indiana Jones sets. (such as the opening chase sequence from Doom being redone!) Thomas the Tank engine in system-scale will sadly never happen, due to Mattel owning it lock-stock-and-barrel and having their own brick-building system as well. As for my personal wish: The Polar Express keeps being rejected but it would be nice to see a big 'modern' American steam loco (maybe with extra coaches as add on packs?) that was made in the era after 1900... steam trains didn't end in the Wild West here in America, LEGO!

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By in United States,

They could start by having at least one set in every theme that is inexpensive.
Also I think every licensed theme should have a wave that has actual minifigures.

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By in United States,

With LEGO Super Mario, Animal Crossing, Legend of Zelda, and now Pokemon, methinks Kirby should be next! Though Bandai already has their own brick sets for Kirby I believe.

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By in United States,

@ScholtzTKO said:
"If you have seen the leaks....
Goku Mech 215pcs $79.99
Hello Kitty Brickheadz 106 pcs $44.99
The Krusty Krab 8,601 pcs $1,389.99
KPop Concert Stage 994 pcs $279.99
Again not 100% confirmed but by the supposed metrics these look likely. "


Those prices don’t really make sense for those piece counts if you are talking US dollars. 106 pieces for $45 for Hello Kitty? And that amount for the Krusty Krab would make it the most expensive LEGO set by a drastic margin, well beyond the price of the current most expensive set, the Death Star. You aren’t going to convince me there are more SpongeBob fans than Star Wars.

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By in United States,

It's a franchise past it's prime and likely still too violent for LEGO standards, but LEGO getting the Halo license would feel like the last hurdle to dancing on the grave of its competition (Star Trek, Pokémon, Spiderman for MEGA, Transformers for Kreo). An official LEGO Master Chief and Cortana would feel as ground shaking as a Halo release on Playstation (ahem) is in terms of geek-gaming culture.

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By in South Africa,

Crash, LEGO could make sets from Cronenberg's adaptation since they love making endless cars and they could even put out a J.G. Ballard GWP like the Jane Austen one.

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By in United States,

@ohrmazd said:
" @ScholtzTKO said:
"If you have seen the leaks....
Goku Mech 215pcs $79.99
Hello Kitty Brickheadz 106 pcs $44.99
The Krusty Krab 8,601 pcs $1,389.99
KPop Concert Stage 994 pcs $279.99
Again not 100% confirmed but by the supposed metrics these look likely. "


Those prices don’t really make sense for those piece counts if you are talking US dollars. 106 pieces for $45 for Hello Kitty? And that amount for the Krusty Krab would make it the most expensive LEGO set by a drastic margin, well beyond the price of the current most expensive set, the Death Star. You aren’t going to convince me there are more SpongeBob fans than Star Wars."


I was mocking Legos recent insanity...

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By in United States,

@ScholtzTKO said:
" @ohrmazd said:
" @ScholtzTKO said:
"If you have seen the leaks....
Goku Mech 215pcs $79.99
Hello Kitty Brickheadz 106 pcs $44.99
The Krusty Krab 8,601 pcs $1,389.99
KPop Concert Stage 994 pcs $279.99
Again not 100% confirmed but by the supposed metrics these look likely. "


Those prices don’t really make sense for those piece counts if you are talking US dollars. 106 pieces for $45 for Hello Kitty? And that amount for the Krusty Krab would make it the most expensive LEGO set by a drastic margin, well beyond the price of the current most expensive set, the Death Star. You aren’t going to convince me there are more SpongeBob fans than Star Wars."


I was mocking Legos recent insanity..."


You had me fooled, as SpongeBob is rumored to be supposedly coming back this year...

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By in United Kingdom,

Would still love a Gerry Anderson licenced theme....
Supercar, Fireball, Stingray and Thunderbirds at least!

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By in Netherlands,

Well.. at least it would seem that the LEGO group does listen to what their fans want and tries to make that happen wherever possible. I for one am happy with the new Star Trek license but aside from that I find myself getting hit with license fatigue and gravitating more and more towards sets that do not have a license attached to them (the added cost for those sets is a major factor).

LEGO is a business like any other. In the end the goal is simply to make a tidy profit for the shareholders in the Christiansen family. And I can't blame them for that strategy.

But personally I'd like them to rely less on the intellectual property of others and create more of their own.

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By in Netherlands,

I wonder how much veracity there is in the rumours that Dimensions Wave 3 would have given us Mega Man, but if this is true and Capcom is amenable, that would be a pret-ty good line for the Ferociously Old Fan of LEGO (the FOFOL). TLG would not have to badger Konami very hard for a Castlevania-license, they're not guarding the brand very fiercely. Nintendo still has some of its own IPs mysteriously left unmilked - think Metroid, but also Kid Icarus.

Those lines would stand alone fairly well, I think. They're very easy to branch out on. And the discerning reader will have spotted it already, it's easy to consolidate these franchises into and/or branch out from a Smash Bros-line, where these, and several existing LEGO-format Nintendo-IPs, already live.

Some Smash-imports will be harder to secure or transpose into LEGO-format, yes. Even if we can get Mega Man from Capcom, there's no guarantee that TLG would also want to bring the Street Fighter-characters on board. We might have Pac-Man, but it's unlikely that TLG wants to bring the Tekken-characters in, unless LEGO really wants to branch into full-contact family-therapy. Square-Enix seems particularly difficult to bring on board, so I don't think we'll see Cloud, Sephiroth, Sora or the Dragon Quest Hero(es) around - even IF TLG would want in a band of kleptomaniac murder-hobos. Apologies to the cast of Fire Emblem as well, all of interchangeably you.

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By in Philippines,

I've seen someone suggest Lego do Fire Emblem and I kinda agree with it being a good backdoor for new Lego Castle minifigs parts (imagine the battle packs they could make with that license.) I'm also still holding on to Lego Kingdom Hearts and Final Fantasy. KH could easily have modular Gummi Ships and reissues of Disney CMFs as a gimmick and FF has the variety of settings to go with (and the prospect of buildable Chocobo)

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By in United States,

The weebs demand their Lego

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By in Hungary,

Stargate SG1 sets, Blade Runner, Mass Effect Trilogy, Cyberpunk 2077, Witcher, Tomb Raider, etc.

What I would really like: Smaller licensed sets based on existing licenses (Dune, Lord of the Rings, Pirates of the Caribbean, etc.) that don't cost €250-500 and don't take up half your shelf space. Something you can safely give your 6-year-old to play with, without having to worry about whether you can buy a new torso on Bricklink for €70.

But all of this can go into one theme, it doesn't have to be separate for each one. I'd rather they bring back a classic, unlicensed theme with a complete range of sets.

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By in Netherlands,

A studio Ghibli licence would be so amazing, I can already imagine the dioramas and buildable creatures of Spirited Away and Princess Mononoke, and art sets of the beautiful scènes from Princess Kaguya

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By in United States,

Another brand currently has Hello Kitty sets on shelves (I think it's Brick Craft, my daughter has two of them).

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By in Netherlands,

I think the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles should make a comeback to LEGO. They were briefly available in LEGO form, for their 2012 Nickelodeon animated series, until Mattel's Mega Blocks/Brix took over the license, and did quite a number of (decent) sets for the 2012 series, the 2014 and 2016 movies, as well as the 1987 cartoon.

Since Playmates Toys' master toy license for TMNT has lapsed, this could very well happen. It's likely though that Mattel could get the master license, since they already had TMNT-themed Hotwheels and a fairly well-received crossover with Masters Of The Universe. This would mean the Turtles stay with Mega Brix or Mel B, or whatever it is called nowadays.

However, if Hasbro happens to get the master toy license, the Turtles might make a return to LEGO, as Hasbro has recently also licensed some of their Transformers characters to LEGO. Then again, there's currently also a collab between Hasbro and Mattel on a Transformers MOTU crossover, so I guess just about anything could happen.

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By in Poland,

Game of Thrones would be cool, but seeing as LEGO doesn't seem to want to make LOTR into a regular theme with normal playsets I don't exactly hold out much hope for a Game of Thrones theme.

Some one-off (and presumably very expensive) Icons sets don't seem unrealistic though. UCS Iron Throne, maybe?

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By in United Kingdom,

I would really love a Gravity Falls license, or other similar shows, like Phineas and Ferb (especially with its new revival). Lego already has Disney sets, so I don't see it being impossible.

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By in United States,

I couldn’t begin to describe how stoked I would be for Chronicles of Narnia sets based on the Walden Trilogy. There are so many opportunities for playsets, display sets, dioramas, battle packs, and more! The minifigures would be incredible, too.

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By in United States,

We are getting K-Pop Demon Hunters sets this or next year

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By in United Kingdom,

@EtudeTheBadger said:
"Star Fox!"
Great Rolling Stones track....

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By in United Kingdom,

Ninjago has produced a more imaginative and creative range of sets than any licensed theme. And what started life as the Cafe Corner and grew into modular buildings has been wildly popular with fans of all ages. Do I need to even mention botanicals as another example? Licensed themes are only a distraction from what LEGO can achieve.

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By in United States,

Clearly what we need is ROMANCING THE STONE and its sequel THE JEWEL OF THE NILE. I also would love to see something from the POLICE ACADEMY cinematic universe. WEEKEND AT BERNIES anyone?

What, don't look at me like that. All of the top-tier 80s/90s nostalgia-bait movies have been done, we have to start mining some of the lesser stuff.

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By in United States,

About NO to all of these. Terrible ideas, just plain terrible.

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By in United States,

I honestly think they are missing a huge opportunity to have licensed characters appear in the Fortnite sets. I would love to have figs of their designs for the ninja turtles and avatar characters!

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By in United States,

Lego Bassmasters

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By in United States,

LOL @ people in the old thread swearing that Star Trek and Transformers would “never happen”.

Yeah, I also didn’t think it would happen. Glad I was wrong. Now if only they’d put out some Trek playsets like the shuttle and not limit it to giant dust collectors that sit on a shelf.

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By in United States,

I* love this discussion, because none of the mentioned themes hold any interest for me.

*my wallet

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By in United Kingdom,

I fear im one of the few remaining holdouts for lego thunderbirds.... one can dream.

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By in United States,

@ohrmazd said:
" @ScholtzTKO said:
"If you have seen the leaks....
Goku Mech 215pcs $79.99
Hello Kitty Brickheadz 106 pcs $44.99
The Krusty Krab 8,601 pcs $1,389.99
KPop Concert Stage 994 pcs $279.99
Again not 100% confirmed but by the supposed metrics these look likely. "


Those prices don’t really make sense for those piece counts if you are talking US dollars. 106 pieces for $45 for Hello Kitty? And that amount for the Krusty Krab would make it the most expensive LEGO set by a drastic margin, well beyond the price of the current most expensive set, the Death Star. You aren’t going to convince me there are more SpongeBob fans than Star Wars."


JOKE. IT WAS A JOKE.

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By in United Kingdom,

Okie Dokie - How about some Fallout sets..

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By in United Kingdom,

Perhaps Lego could release that Indiana Jones Temple of Doom set they cancelled.

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By in United States,

Think a few Disney Channel animated shows (especially the Mystery Shack from Gravity Falls) might be cool as sets but I don’t think they’ll happen for another few years at the very least.

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By in United States,

i'd kill for Cinnamoroll and Lloromannic minifigs, but if LEGO Sanrio ever comes along, i'll probably only get Cinnamoroll out of it at best

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By in United States,

I'd go for No Man's Sky sets. Its a creative and imaginative exploration game. Even some of the ships look like they can be made of LEGO easily :)

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By in United Kingdom,

@jsutton said:
"Ninjago has produced a more imaginative and creative range of sets than any licensed theme. And what started life as the Cafe Corner and grew into modular buildings has been wildly popular with fans of all ages. Do I need to even mention botanicals as another example? Licensed themes are only a distraction from what LEGO can achieve."

Add in the long running City and Creative lines and it seems like they've got the balance about right.

That said if we're going to chuck in suggestions that will never happen - Fallout and Only Fools & Horses. A crossover line would be even better.

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By in United States,

Hello Kitty sets are already being made. I think it's Brickcraft that has them. So that license would have to be lost and then gained. Which is possible as it happened with Pokemon.

More Dungeons & Dragons (a lot more) (a large buildable beholder would be awesome)

World Of Warcraft would be awesome

I'd love more deep dives into 80s properties like Voltron & Scooby-Doo did: Herculoids, Gatchaman, Starblazers, Space Ghost, stuff like that

Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles return
Percy Jackson
Legend Of Vox Machina (pipe dream, i know)

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By in Germany,

I like original themes the most, but if I had a wish for a licenced theme, it proabably would be a Shonen Jump theme with sets from series that ran in the magazine. Dragon Ball, Naruto, (actual) One Piece, Bleach, Saint Seiya, Fist of the North Star, Gintama, Eyeshield 21 etc.

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By in United States,

I must be an outlier in the sense that I have zero interest in licensed themes.

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By in United Kingdom,

Unfortunately, there will never be Ghibli sets, as the company has a cap as to how much money it can make to stop it going corrupt.

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By in United States,

Can we get a Classic Ninjago line? Would that count as licensed at this point? Current Ninjago is so far off the rails, you could have a whole product line remaking sets/scenes from the early years and they'd look like they came from another theme entirely.

On a slightly more realistic note: more Nintendo IPs would be great. I honestly would go for a Super Smash Bros-inspired line, just to get a sampling from a wide array of games. I'm not sure how such a line would work; either just make the fighters with some iconic local from their games, or make the Smash stages themselves (in which case LEGO would have to work in some kind of play gimmick)? In any case we're missing some of the bigger Nintendo IPs still, like Kirby, Metroid, and Pikmin (IMO). Now, would Kirby sets look awful in LEGO, and would a brick-built Kirby be a hideous nightmare due to LEGO's current design philosophy? Yes; cf. UCS Pikachu. However, do I want a UCS Dedede to go next to my UCS Bowser? Also yes. That would be Dededelightful.

But really, I just want Xenoblade sets. I've seen Metal Face MOCs out there; it's possible. Give me my Monado Boy, LEGO! Oh, and some affordable Lord of the Rings sets, while you're at it.

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By in United States,

Day 3000 of wishing Lego would make an Inspector Gadget set

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By in Canada,

I would buy well done Ghibli related sets. But TBH, I have a hard time imagining something that would be good enough. What I currently see on Ideas is not good enough. Maybe a detailed model of the inn from Spirited Away. But overall it seems hard to realize in LEGO form.

I think a selection of James Bond related cars, from different movies, could be cool. I loved the Aston Martin.

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By in Canada,

(By PaddyNE in United Kingdom, 18 Jan 2026 18:47 Unfortunately, there will never be Ghibli sets, as the company has a cap as to how much money it can make to stop it going corrupt.)

I don't think this is true. The proliferation of Donguri Republic stores tells me they are trying to milk their IP for all its worth.

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By in United States,

Snoopy, more than the IDEAS set, Herbie,as Speed Champions, and other way classic Disney, (vault deep),more licensed trains(Polar Express)hmmm.

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By in United Kingdom,

@sjr60 said:
"Would still love a Gerry Anderson licenced theme....
Supercar, Fireball, Stingray and Thunderbirds at least!"


Quite. This is an ideal partnership for LEGO. The licence is modest compared the likes of Pokemon and the various brands owned by Disney so cost isn't an issue. Anderson Entertainment are not adverse to the partnership either. The range of craft included across the programmes is significant, many still iconic 60 years later, and several designs are unsurpassed to this day. Large display models could be released for the largely adult fanbase, and playsets would appeal to youngsters because they look cool, even if they have never seen the programmes they originate from.

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By in United States,

@troynos said:
"More Dungeons & Dragons (a lot more) (a large buildable beholder would be awesome)"

Yes, they are. I’ve built 21 myself. Technically 22, since I made two copies of the Death Tyrant. One is loose in my Bag of Beholdering, and the other is in my Shrine of the Beholder scene.

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By in United Kingdom,

@Goujon said:
"I fear im one of the few remaining holdouts for lego thunderbirds.... one can dream. "

It's reached the review stage of Ideas more than once, and Anderson Entertainment are reasonably keen, so clearly LEGO are not interested. Their focus is on wasting millions of Euros and many years, on gimmicks such as Smart Bricks, rather than making sets people actually want.

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By in United States,

@troynos said:
"Hello Kitty sets are already being made. I think it's Brickcraft that has them. So that license would have to be lost and then gained. Which is possible as it happened with Pokemon.

More Dungeons & Dragons (a lot more) (a large buildable beholder would be awesome)

World Of Warcraft would be awesome

I'd love more deep dives into 80s properties like Voltron & Scooby-Doo did: Herculoids, Gatchaman, Starblazers, Space Ghost, stuff like that

Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles return
Percy Jackson
Legend Of Vox Machina (pipe dream, i know)

"


I hate to be that guy, but Scooby-Doo started in 1969.
Also, to all those who want anime sets: If we're going to do anything anime, we should revisit the first anime to make it big outside Japan - Speed Racer!

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By in United States,

Dragonball Z would be great…as a CMF series. I mean there’s a handful of locations that could be done, but it’s mostly just landscapes.

But what they should do(or maybe shouldn’t………..) is Gundam. With what they’ve done with Ninjago & MK lately they could absolutely kill with a Gundam theme. Preferably Wing or G. Or to a lesser extent, Iron Blooded Orphans.

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By in United Kingdom,

@Murdoch17 said:
"I hate to be that guy, but Scooby-Doo started in 1969."

I infer from that comment that you place a time limit upon how long anything is popular for. If that is true why are they continually making new versions of Agatha Christie, Dickens and Shakespeare? I know the majority of people I know would rather watch Scooby Doo than Shakespeare.

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By in New Zealand,

I rather like the idea of a series of James Bond related minifigures - various iterations of Bond himself, some of the classic/noteworthy Bond girls and, of course, the superb Villains and their henchmen. This need not be related to larger sets, although building some of the villainous lairs might be a possibility, or the vehicles. A couple of minifigure sets focusing on Bond characters (a la Doctor Who, Indiana Jones, Harry Potter, etc) would, I think, be best sellers.

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By in Portugal,

I will sell my soul to LEGO for Dragon Ball. Would like Digimon too. Definetly up for more of Avatar The Last Airbender since I didnt get any last time.

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By in United States,

I would like to see Lego Avatar: The Last Airbender sets.

I was surprised that Disney's "Phineas and Ferb" didn't make it to this list. "Phineas and Ferb projects perennially appear on Lego Ideas, but are always rejected. Presumably, Lego doesn't want the trouble and expense of creating new molds for the characters' stylized cartoon heads.

Given how poorly 21339 was received, Lego can be forgiven for not courting KPop Demon Hunters.

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By in United States,

The alternative, actually making sets with the underutilized themes they have, like LOTR, Indiana Jones, Pirates of the Caribean, and Dungeons and Dragons

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By in United Kingdom,

Wacky Races would be rather good too!

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By in United Kingdom,

@Doctor_Hugh said:
"Their focus is on wasting millions of Euros and many years, on gimmicks such as Smart Bricks, rather than making sets people actually want."

Which, of course, is exactly the way they look at it.

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By in Netherlands,

Studio Ghibli Lego would be cool....but will it ever happen?

DBZ on the other hand.....rather old franchise. And while far from forgotten, would there still be that much interest? So in that regard, I just don't see it happen.

Some other (granted, also old) anime-licenses I would love to see but doubt will ever happen: Neon Genesis Evangelion (it's just kids in cool robots, right?), Gundam (more kids in robots...), Cowboy Bebop (Spaceship! Spaceship! SPACESHIP!), and Akira.

As for more recent franchises.....I kinda have a feeling most of the those are more about the characters than locations or vehichles, which limits the options for sets. I mean, Demon Slayer is huge, but apart from some minifigs, what else could they do with that? Same with like JJK or Chainsaw Man.

Oh, and we need Yuru Camp Lego. I don't care what, but I want it.

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By in United Kingdom,

Y’know, generally speaking I like exaggeration for jokey effect, but the problem is that both prices per piece and size-within-size-specific-themes have (mostly) stayed pretty steady, so it looks silly to claim a Brickheadz kit with less than half the number of pieces it should have and several times the price. It isn’t skewering anything that Lego are actually doing, it’s just wrong. A better version would be gradually more ridiculously *huge* sets with the accompanying price to match the number of pieces.

If you wanted to play to the anti-base bit of the playerbase you could probs do something with that, too, maybe even with the Brickheadz - the next five set comes with a huge built base and an equally huge price. And also mention a set-linked GWP or one with an enormous threshold. Stuff like that.

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By in United Kingdom,

@sjr60 said:
"Wacky Races would be rather good too!"

Oh, Wacky Races kits would be *extremely* fun if the Mario Kart line is anything to judge by.

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By in United States,

@Doctor_Hugh said:
" @Murdoch17 said:
"I hate to be that guy, but Scooby-Doo started in 1969."

I infer from that comment that you place a time limit upon how long anything is popular for. If that is true why are they continually making new versions of Agatha Christie, Dickens and Shakespeare? I know the majority of people I know would rather watch Scooby Doo than Shakespeare."


The original poster's comment said "80's properties like Scooby Doo...", to which I was simply pointing out it's not from then.

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By in United States,

@Doctor_Hugh said:
" @sjr60 said:
"Would still love a Gerry Anderson licenced theme....
Supercar, Fireball, Stingray and Thunderbirds at least!"


Quite. This is an ideal partnership for LEGO. The licence is modest compared the likes of Pokemon and the various brands owned by Disney so cost isn't an issue. Anderson Entertainment are not adverse to the partnership either. The range of craft included across the programmes is significant, many still iconic 60 years later, and several designs are unsurpassed to this day. Large display models could be released for the largely adult fanbase, and playsets would appeal to youngsters because they look cool, even if they have never seen the programmes they originate from."


A Lego Eagle Transporter would be a day one purchase for me, regardless of price.

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By in United States,

@sjr60 said:
"Wacky Races would be rather good too!"

I would buy the heck out of that!

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By in United Kingdom,

LEGO M.A.S.K. would be great!

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By in United States,

How about better, more affordable options from the licenses LEGO already has?

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By in Poland,

Propper Donald Duckverse sets. Its only thing I want now from licences.
To be honest I just want figures as I already moced most of stuff i wanted.
Give me:
>Classic Magica De Spell
>Scrooge's butler
>3 Beagleboys (or just one head)
>Donald's COusins.

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By in Australia,

Futurama is still a biggie, especially considering Lego does/did the Simpsons and there is a new (if bad) Hulu series.

Personally I'd love a M.A.S.K series. Could be similar to the Transformers theme.
Or some other 80s classics like Inspector Gadget

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By in Canada,

I like the recent silent launch of "cars from movies" as a "Speed Champions" sub-theme, so I hope they will do more of these.

And I think exploring video games should be the next steps.

But, I fear that every new IP will be display sets only for $$$.

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By in Australia,

Stargate SG1, or the relaunching SG series from Amazon. Should of been one of the IPs in dimensions at the time as the pad was essentially a stargate.

Doubt they would ever go near the Warhammer universe anytime soon.

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By in Turkey,

Non licensed thematic sets.

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By in Belgium,

What we really need: "Spaceballs: The LEGO Set", featuring Lone Starr's Winnebago and Spaceballs One! This would tie in perfectly with "Spaceballs: The Search for More Money" when it releases. However, Mel Brooks was allowed by George Lucas to shoot this parody on the condition he wouldn't sell any Spaceballs-related merchandise. I wonder if the situation has changed now Disney owns Star Wars, though…

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By in United States,

More TRON sets (without any ARES based sets)

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By in United States,

Bring back TMNT and Scooby Doo.
Add Speed Racer to the Speed Champions series.
Since Lego loves doing these mech sets, then get the Gundam or Macross/Robotech licenses.
Keep going back to the 80's cartoon nostalgia, make Thundercats, He-Man, and GI Joe sets.
For video game licenses, Mega Man, Castlevania, and Metroid.
For movies, Aliens.

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By in Germany,

Area-X has done a great Krusty Krab set and nice 16x16 vignettes with acrylic display cubes. The figures are styled similar to the Mega Bloks line. Much better approach for that series than minifigures in my opinion.
Area-X having the license might be a local thing restricted to Asia, so it may prevent LEGO from getting it or maybe not.

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