Batman Logo
The bat symbol you know, hiding a whole rogues' gallery in plain sight.
Brick Rated Score
Set 76330 · 2026
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I did not expect a plain black bat logo to charm me, and then I clocked the Penguin's umbrella and Harley's hammer tucked into the surface as texture, and I was hooked.
It is a smart, wall-ready display piece that celebrates 20 years of LEGO Batman, with a gold anniversary Batman that collectors will want. The greebles ping off if you handle it too much, and the price per piece runs high, so this is one for the shelf, not the play table. If you love Batman and want something graphic on your wall, it earns its spot.
Best for: Batman fans who want a graphic wall piece rather than another vehicle
What it is
I will admit I was ready to shrug at this one. A black bat logo on a wall did not sound like much of a build, and I was wrong within about ten minutes. The whole face of the symbol is textured with monochromatic pieces, and once you realize every little black lump is an easter egg, the Penguin's top hat and umbrella, Harley Quinn's hammer, the Riddler's cane, Catwoman's whip, the Joker's trick gun, Mr. Freeze's freeze ray, it stops being a logo and turns into a scavenger hunt. That is the moment the set got me. It measures roughly 36cm wide and 23cm tall, it lifts off its stand for wall mounting, and there is a genuinely fun hinged Batsuit vault door in the middle that opens to tuck a minifig inside.
The catch
Now for the honest wobbles, because there are a few. This is a 678-piece set at 79.99 dollars, which is a chunky per-piece cost, and you are partly paying for the license and the display footprint rather than raw brick value. Because the surface is almost entirely black, there is not much in the way of exciting recolors to reward parts hunters, which is a real shame given how much visual interest is packed into the shaping. The bigger practical gripe reviewers keep raising is fragility. Attaching all those greebles is fiddly, working on the back can knock pieces off as you go, and the finished model does not love being handled or swooshed. Things ping off. This is a set you build once, mount, and admire, not one you pick up and pass around.
Who it's for
So who should bring it home? If you are a Batman fan who wants something graphic and recognizable on the wall, or a DC collector who cares about that exclusive gold anniversary Batman and the printed tile, this is an easy yes. It is also a lovely, low-pressure build for anyone who enjoys spotting references. If you live for complex engineering or want fistfuls of rare recolored parts for your own creations, this will feel a bit thin, and if your Batman shelf is already groaning with 2026 Batmobiles, the lineup does start to feel oversaturated. Buy it for the display and the celebration, not for the piece bargain, and you will be very happy with it.
The parts story
What the build is actually like, and the pieces worth knowing about.
The build itself is relaxed and forgiving right up until the greebling stage. You lay down the black bat shape, and then the fun and the frustration arrive together as you attach dozens of small detachable accessories across the surface. Handling the model while you dress the back is genuinely awkward, and it is easy to knock loose pieces you already placed, so patience helps here. None of it is technically hard, it is just fiddly in a way that rewards a steady hand and a clear table.
On the parts front, the headline is restraint rather than fireworks. There is exactly one new print, the 2x2 tile marking 20 years of LEGO Batman, and it is a genuine exclusive worth having. The gold Batman is a color swap but a striking one on the shelf. The nicest quiet surprise for parts watchers is the little cat element (Catwoman's kitten) appearing in black for the first time, having previously only shown up unprinted in white and dark bluish grey. Beyond that, the all-black palette keeps the recolor haul modest, so treat this as a display set with a couple of collectible extras rather than a parts pack.
Fun facts
- 01The set celebrates 20 years of the LEGO Batman partnership, which kicked off back in 2006, and the gold anniversary Batman is exclusive to this box.
- 02A QR code on the instruction booklet redeems the gold Batman outfit inside the video game LEGO Batman: Legacy of the Dark Knight.
- 03Nearly every black bump on the logo's surface is a hidden villain reference, from the Penguin's umbrella and top hat to the Riddler's cane, Catwoman's whip, Harley's hammer, the Joker's trick gun, and Mr. Freeze's freeze ray.
- 04The model lifts off its included stand and hangs on the wall using a Technic 3x5 panel with a built-in mounting hole, and a central vault door opens to store a minifig.
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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