Star Wars

Anzellan Starship

A tiny junk-hauler with a doll's-house heart, if you can forgive the price.

Brick Rated Score

3.8 out of 53.8/5

Set 75445 · 2026

Pieces702
Minifigs4
Year2026
Set number75445

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The verdict

This one snuck up on me.

I expected another grey freighter and instead got a scrappy little ship with a cutaway interior built for characters the size of my thumbnail, and that is genuinely charming. The problem is the sticker: seventy-five dollars for a set with no full minifigures and a small footprint is a hard ask. I'd say get it if you love The Mandalorian and Grogu and the micro-scale idea makes you grin, and skip it if you buy Star Wars sets for the figures.

Best for: Mandalorian and Grogu fans who love a detailed cutaway interior over minifig count

The full review

What it is

The Anzellan Starship is a small original ship from the 2026 Mandalorian and Grogu film, and it is built around one clever idea. The Anzellans and Grogu are tiny figures, roughly a third of a minifigure, so LEGO scaled the whole interior down to match them. Lift the studded roof off and you get a proper little cutaway world in there: a table set with biscuits for Grogu, a worktop with a coffee mug, a mini chair facing a control panel, and a workbench scattered with minifigure-sized tools the Anzellans tinker with. The first time I popped that roof I actually laughed, because the headroom is so low it looks like a caravan built for hamsters, and I mean that as a compliment. It is dense, it is characterful, and at around 700 pieces it packs in far more than the exterior suggests.

The catch

I have to be straight with you about the money, though, because it is the thing every reviewer keeps circling back to. Seventy-five dollars gets you a set with no full-size minifigures and a footprint that feels small when it is sitting on your shelf next to it. That works out to a little over ten cents a piece, which is fine on paper, but LEGO Star Wars pricing usually leans on iconic minifigures to justify itself, and here there simply aren't any. From certain angles the ship also reads as a fairly plain grey block, the kind of utilitarian freighter you have seen a dozen times, so the magic really does live on the inside rather than the outside. If display presence is what you are paying for, this is not the set that delivers it.

Who it's for

So who lands on the happy side of this? If you adore the world of The Mandalorian and Grogu, if the idea of a doll's-house interior scaled to Babu Frik's people delights you rather than annoys you, you will get a lot of joy out of this. It is a lovely, quiet, detail-hunting build and the finished thing rewards anyone who likes to peer inside and find little jokes. The people who should walk away are the collectors who measure a Star Wars set by its minifigure roster, and the display-first builders who want something big and impressive on the shelf. This is a niche pleasure, and it knows exactly what it is. Owner ratings have landed high, around 4.6 out of 5, which tells you the people who click with the concept really do fall for it.

The parts story

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

Building this is a slow, fiddly pleasure rather than a big architectural push. Because everything is scaled down for the tiny figures, you spend a lot of time on small greebly detail work, layering plates and clips and little technical bits to fake out all that exposed machinery on the hull. The interior is where the time goes, fitting the furniture and tools into a space with almost no headroom, and it is satisfying in the way a good miniature always is. The roof lifts off on studs for easy access, which is a smart call given how much of the fun is inside.

The standout part here is Grogu's new torso element, printed with beskar armour and the Mudhorn sigil on the chest, which is exclusive to this 2026 wave and a real want for figure collectors. The two Anzellans reuse the small Babu Frik mould first seen in the 2025 Advent Calendar, but they carry fresh prints that genuinely look fantastic up close, and there is a B-1 battle droid in the mix too. Value-wise you are getting a decent parts count of useful small greeble pieces, but nobody is buying this for the parts pile. You buy it for the printed figures and the tiny world they live in.

Fun facts

  • 01The set includes no standard minifigures at all, only the tiny Anzellan-scale figures plus a B-1 battle droid, which is unusual for a LEGO Star Wars playset at this price.
  • 02The Anzellan species debuted in Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker as the droidsmith Babu Frik, became an instant fan favourite, and later popped up in The Mandalorian and Young Jedi Adventures.
  • 03Grogu's torso print with beskar armour and the Mudhorn sigil is new to the 2026 wave, making this set a target for figure collectors.
  • 04The ship is an all-new original design tied to the 2026 film The Mandalorian and Grogu, and Brickset called it their favourite Mandalorian and Grogu set so far.

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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