Batman Tumbler vs. Two-Face & The Joker
A pocket-sized Tumbler with a genuinely great rogues' gallery, if you can get past the price hike.
Brick Rated Score
Set 76303 · 2025
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I opened this one hoping for a scaled-down version of the 2021 Scarecrow Showdown Tumbler, and that's basically what I got, chunky proportions, that satisfying angular hull, a flame effect stuck to the tailpipe.
What actually won me over wasn't the vehicle though, it was the three minifigures sitting in the box. Heath Ledger's Joker showing up in a sub-150-dollar set is a genuinely big deal for collectors who never wanted to pay UCS prices for him. This is a set for Batman completists and minifig collectors first, and a build-experience set a distant second.
Best for: Batman minifig collectors who want Heath Ledger's Joker without paying UCS prices
What it is
This is LEGO going back to the Tumbler well for the third time, and the honest truth is I like what they did with the cast more than what they did with the car. You get Christian Bale's Batman, Aaron Eckhart's Two-Face with his signature ruined-suit look, and Heath Ledger's Joker in his purple coat and green vest, all three new sculpts made just for this set. The Joker's double-sided head uses the same print as the pricier UCS Tumbler, so if you've been priced out of that one, this is your way in.
The catch
I have to be straight with you about the money, though. This set costs 20 dollars more than the 2021 Scarecrow Showdown Tumbler while giving you a smaller cockpit that seats only Batman instead of two figures. That's the kind of downgrade that shows up in every review and every comment thread about this set, and it's a fair complaint. The build itself is over quickly too, the panels click together in a satisfying way but there's no clever technique here that will make an experienced builder sit up.
Who it's for
Get this one for the minifigures. If you collect Batman villains or you've always wanted Heath Ledger's Joker on your shelf without spending UCS money, it's worth it even at full price. If you already own the 2021 Tumbler and you're only after the vehicle, wait for a sale, you're not getting enough new here to justify paying more for less.
The parts story
What the build is actually like, and the pieces worth knowing about.
Building this one takes an evening at most, it's mostly wide black and dark bley panels stacking onto a simple chassis, with a handful of wheel and axle pieces doing the heavy lifting. There's no tricky SNOT work or hidden mechanism to puzzle over, which makes it a pleasant, low-stress build rather than a challenging one. The Bat-signal is the one section with a bit more going on, a rotating joint that lets it swivel and tilt on its little tripod stand.
The real value is sitting in the minifig bags. Two-Face's silver coin is printed on both sides, including the scarred, scratched-up Statue of Liberty face that's his tell before he flips a coin. Joker's head print is shared with the far pricier UCS Tumbler set, so you're effectively getting a slice of that figure's detail at a fraction of the cost. None of the pieces are wild new molds, but the print quality across all three figures is a clear step up from older Batman minifigs in this price range.
Fun facts
- 01This is the third LEGO Tumbler set overall, following the 2021 Scarecrow Showdown version and the earlier Ultimate Collector Series model.
- 02Heath Ledger's Joker minifigure uses the same double-sided head print found in the much more expensive UCS Tumbler set, making this the cheapest way to own that likeness.
- 03Two-Face's coin is a printed piece showing his scarred, damaged side, matching the coin flip that defines the character in the film.
- 04The Bat-signal projector doesn't light up, but it does rotate a full 360 degrees and tilts on its stand.
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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