Star Wars

Ahsoka Tano's T-6 Jedi Shuttle

Four of the best Ahsoka minifigures LEGO has made, wrapped around a shuttle that never quite catches up to them.

Brick Rated Score

3.7 out of 53.7/5

Set 75362 · 2023

Pieces608
Minifigs4
Year2023
Set number75362

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The verdict

I will be straight with you: I bought this one for the people, not the ship.

Ahsoka, Sabine, Huyang and Marrok are genuinely gorgeous minifigures, and the shuttle is a pleasant if slightly underwhelming way to display them. It is small for the money and the cockpit only fits one figure, so this is really a minifigure pack with a nice folding-wing centerpiece. If you love the Ahsoka show, you will be happy. If you want a big display starship, look elsewhere.

Best for: Ahsoka show fans and minifigure collectors who want those four figures more than the ship

The full review

What it is

The thing that got me about this set was Huyang. I did not expect a droid architect from a Disney Plus show to end up as one of my favorite LEGO minifigures of the year, but here we are. He gets a new molded head (a touch oversized, sure), printed wiring down his back, and a little printed 1x1 tile mounted on his spine for extra depth. He is the standout in a box that is already stacked, because this is really a set built around its four exclusive figures. Ahsoka arrives in the gunmetal grey robes she wears in both The Mandalorian and the Ahsoka series, complete with toe printing and a new rubbery lekku headpiece with printed detail, plus two clear lightsabers on printed arms. Sabine Wren has a lovely new helmet print and swaps to dual blasters. Marrok rounds it out in matching gunmetal grey with a new helmet mold. Line those four up and you have most of the reason to own this set.

The catch

The shuttle itself is where I have to temper the enthusiasm. At around 30cm wide it is genuinely small for 80 dollars, and once you have built it the value math leans heavily on those minifigures rather than the model. The signature feature is the folding wings, which pivot from flight position to a landing stance on a chunky Technic turntable, and that part works well and feels sturdy. But the cockpit only fits a single minifigure, which stings when the box hands you four of them and no room to seat the crew. And the underside of the wings is left hollow and unfinished, so from the wrong angle you catch bare studs and gaps. None of this ruins the set, but it does explain why so many reviewers told people to wait for a discount or a gift-with-purchase rather than pay full price.

Who it's for

So who is this actually for? If you follow the Ahsoka show and you want those four figures in your collection, this is the cleanest way to get them, and the shuttle is a perfectly nice stand for them to live on. Casual builders who want a big, impressive starship for their money will feel a little short-changed, and this is not the set to hand someone chasing a meaty engineering challenge either. It sat at 80 dollars new, retired in December 2025, and the sealed value has actually slipped below retail since, so patient buyers who catch it secondhand can do quite well. Buy it for the crew, enjoy the folding wings as a bonus, and you will not regret it.

The parts story

What the build is actually like, and the pieces worth knowing about.

The build is quick and gentle, closer to a relaxed evening than a marathon. At just over 600 pieces it comes together fast, with the folding-wing mechanism as the one genuinely clever bit of engineering: a large Technic turntable lets the wings swing between cruise and landing modes, and getting that to feel solid is the most rewarding stretch of the instructions. The rest is straightforward hull work, so newer builders will keep up easily while veterans will breeze through it in an hour or two.

The real treasure here is in the printed and molded parts rather than the structure. Ahsoka's new rubbery lekku piece is lovely, Huyang gets an all-new head mold plus that spine-mounted printed tile, and Marrok debuts a new helmet mold while reusing the Grand Inquisitor chest armor in a fresh recolor and print. Sabine's helmet carries a new print too. Even the two clear lightsaber blades and printed arms on Ahsoka are nicer than the parts-count-per-dollar suggests. This is a set where the small exclusive elements, not the bricks, are what make it worth opening.

Fun facts

  • 01This is the first LEGO T-6 Jedi Shuttle since set 7931 back in 2011, over a decade between models of the same ship.
  • 02Huyang is represented with a standard minifigure body but a brand-new molded head, and even has a printed 1x1 tile mounted on his back for extra 3D detail.
  • 03Marrok reuses the Grand Inquisitor's chest armor piece in a new recolor and pairs it with an all-new helmet mold exclusive to this set.
  • 04The set retired in December 2025, and three of its four minifigures are exclusive to this release.

What other builders say

This write-up is grounded in real reviews and builder discussion, not just one opinion. A few worth reading:

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