Baby Bumpy: Ankylosaurus
A pocket sized armored tank with more personality than sets three times her price.
Brick Rated Score
Set 76962 · 2024
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Bumpy is the character everyone remembers from the Camp Cretaceous crowd, and LEGO gave her a build that actually moves the way she should, neck swinging, legs planted wide, that club tail swaying behind her.
For 358 pieces and a set that stayed under twenty five dollars, I think this is one of the better value plays in the whole Jurassic World lineup. It will not challenge an experienced builder and there are no minifigures in the box, so go in knowing this is a display piece and a character piece, not a scene builder. If you or your young paleontologist loves Chaos Theory, this one earns its shelf space.
Best for: Camp Cretaceous and Chaos Theory fans who want Bumpy herself, not a generic dino
What it is
Bumpy was the baby Ankylosaurus who stole scenes on Camp Cretaceous and carried straight through into Chaos Theory, and I love that LEGO built a set just for her instead of folding her into a bigger habitat set nobody asked for. At 358 pieces she comes together fast, but the payoff is in the posing. The neck rotates, the legs are jointed enough to give her a proper waddling stance, and that tail club swings with real weight to it. She is small, about 20 centimeters nose to tail, but she does not feel small once she is standing on a shelf next to a book or a plant.
The catch
I will be honest about the caveats. There are no minifigures in this box, so if you were hoping to add a Darius or a Brooklynn figure to your collection, this is not that set. The build itself is quick and uncomplicated, which is exactly right for a younger builder but will feel breezy if you are used to the bigger technic-jointed dinosaurs in this theme. And because it is a single character rather than a scene, it does not do much beyond looking good and posing well.
Who it's for
This is the set for someone who already loves Bumpy specifically, a parent building alongside a Camp Cretaceous fan, or a completionist who wants the full roster of Chaos Theory creatures. If you want a bigger build experience or minifigures to go with your dinosaurs, look toward the larger Jurassic World vehicle and habitat sets instead.
The parts story
What the build is actually like, and the pieces worth knowing about.
The build leans on a jointed core, ball and socket connections at the hips, shoulders, and neck base, so the whole model holds a pose instead of flopping over the way flatter animal builds sometimes do. Assembly moves quickly through the legs and body before layering on the armor plating, which is where the set earns its looks.
The standout here is the back and tail armor, rows of curved plates and the clubbed tail end that give Bumpy her signature ankylosaur silhouette without resorting to one giant molded piece. It is mostly common plates and slopes doing the work, which keeps the price down, but the way they are stacked and angled tricks the eye into seeing scaled hide rather than LEGO studs. For a set under twenty five dollars with 358 pieces, that is a solid return, and it is proof this theme's smaller builds can still feel considered rather than filler.
Fun facts
- 01Bumpy is the baby Ankylosaurus who became a fan favorite through Jurassic World: Camp Cretaceous and continued into the sequel series Jurassic World: Chaos Theory on Netflix
- 02The set carried an RRP of 24.99 dollars for 358 pieces, one of the stronger price to piece ratios in the 2024 Jurassic World wave
- 03The finished model measures roughly 20 centimeters long, small enough to display without needing dedicated shelf space
- 04LEGO's official retail window for the set ran from mid 2024 through the end of 2025, and it has since retired
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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