Bugatti Vision GT Hyper Sports Car
A tiny brick tribute to a car that never fully existed outside a video game, and it nails the horseshoe grille perfectly.
Brick Rated Score
Set 77253 · 2026
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I sat with this one longer than I expected to for a car that's only 16 centimeters long, because the front end really is that good.
The printed horseshoe grille and headlight pieces do more work than I thought 284 parts could manage, and the angled door sub assemblies give the side profile a real sense of motion even though nothing opens. Where it loses me a bit is the back, which flattens out into something blockier than the rest of the build promised. Get this one if you love the Bugatti shape or the Gran Turismo game it came from, and go in knowing the rear won't wow you the way the nose does.
Best for: Speed Champions collectors who want the Bugatti silhouette without committing to a huge shelf piece
What it is
I'll be straight with you about this one. The Bugatti Vision Gran Turismo started life as a car that was never meant to be driven, a digital-only concept Bugatti designed back in 2015 for a racing video game, and LEGO's little 284-piece version captures that strange origin story better than I expected. The front is the star. Printed pieces handle the headlights and that unmistakable horseshoe grille, and the whole nose reads as Bugatti from across the room even shrunk down to Speed Champions scale.
The catch
Here's the part I want you going in clear-eyed about. This is a small set at 16 centimeters long, and the rear of the model doesn't get the same love as the front. Reviewers who built it flagged the back as relatively flat and blocky, and the rear wing in particular reads a bit chunky next to the sleeker nose. At $27.99 for 284 pieces it's fairly priced for what you get, and there's genuinely more printed detail here than stickers, but you're still buying a five-bag quick build rather than a weekend project.
Who it's for
Grab this if you're chasing the Bugatti shape for your Speed Champions row or you have a soft spot for the Gran Turismo game this car came from, the printed controller piece alone is a fun little easter egg. Skip it if you want a display piece that looks equally strong from every angle, because the back half just doesn't match the front's ambition.
The parts story
What the build is actually like, and the pieces worth knowing about.
The build runs through five numbered bags and moves fast, which is standard for Speed Champions, but the techniques inside aren't lazy. The designers lean on angled sub assemblies to fake opening doors and to shape the car's swooping side profile without any actual moving parts, and it works better than it has any right to at this scale.
The piece list punches above its size. You get printed tires borrowed from LEGO's F1 line, a printed steering wheel, and a printed video game controller piece that nods directly to the car's origins as a Gran Turismo concept rather than a road car. The horseshoe grille and headlight prints up front do the heaviest lifting for getting the Bugatti look right, and there's still an 18-piece sticker sheet handling the rest of the livery. For 284 pieces you're getting a reasonable amount of printed detail rather than an all-sticker shortcut, even if the block-built rear can't quite keep pace with the nose.
Fun facts
- 01The real Bugatti Vision Gran Turismo was designed in 2015 purely as a virtual concept car for the Gran Turismo 6 video game, and Bugatti only later built a single physical show car version of it.
- 02This LEGO set includes a printed video game controller minifig accessory, a direct reference to the car's digital-first origins.
- 03It released in January 2026 as part of a Speed Champions wave that also brought new Ferrari and McLaren sets.
- 04The single included minifig has a double-sided head, one side with glasses and one without.
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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