Captain America vs. Thanos
A pocket sized Endgame showdown built for the youngest Avengers fans
Brick Rated Score
Set 76319 · 2025
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This one is not built for me, and that is kind of the point.
It is a junior set, aimed at four plus, where the pieces are big and chunky and the whole build takes maybe fifteen minutes with a kid on your lap. What I actually love here is that LEGO did not cheap out on the story. You get Captain America with his Vibranium shield, Thanos with the full Infinity Gauntlet, and every one of the six Infinity Stones represented. For the price, that is a lot of Marvel mythology packed into a small box. If you are hunting for a display centerpiece or a dense part count, keep walking. If you are looking for the set that turns a small kid into a Marvel fan for life, this earns its spot on the shelf.
Best for: parents introducing a preschooler or early elementary kid to their first Marvel build
What it is
I will say this straight away: this is not a set for the adult fan who wants to lose an afternoon snapping together greebled detail. It is a junior set, rated four plus, and it is built exactly the way it should be for that audience. The pieces are oversized, the instructions are simple enough for a kid to follow with just a little help, and the whole thing goes together in one sitting. What surprised me, honestly, is how much Marvel story LEGO managed to cram into it. You are not just getting two generic figures standing near each other. You are getting Captain America holding his actual Vibranium shield facing off against Thanos wearing the complete Infinity Gauntlet, all six stones present and accounted for. That is the kind of detail that turns a simple toy into something a kid asks you to retell the whole movie plot over.
The catch
Now the honest caveats. Price per piece here runs somewhere between twenty eight and thirty seven cents depending on which currency you are shopping in, and for a hundred and seven piece set that is on the pricier end of what LEGO offers. If you are the kind of collector who tracks value against part count, this will not win that argument. There is also an aircraft element included, which is a nice touch for imaginative play, but do not expect it to be a detailed vehicle build. This is a junior set through and through, so the aircraft is simplified and stylized rather than screen accurate. And at just thirteen by fourteen by four centimeters finished, it is a small footprint. Next to the bigger Marvel dioramas on a shelf, this one will look modest.
Who it's for
Who should buy this: a parent or grandparent looking for a first LEGO set for a young Marvel fan, someone who wants a quick confidence building build rather than a weekend project, or a completionist who wants every Infinity Stone represented in their collection without hunting down a much bigger set. Who should skip it: adult fans chasing part count value, anyone wanting a screen accurate recreation, or displays hunters who need something with more shelf presence.
The parts story
What the build is actually like, and the pieces worth knowing about.
Building this feels exactly like it should for the audience LEGO built it for. The pieces are large, the connections are forgiving, and a young builder can get through the whole thing with a parent nearby for encouragement rather than hands on help. There is no fussy stacking or tiny piece hunting here, which is the entire appeal if you are buying this for a kid rather than yourself.
The standout piece by a wide margin is the Infinity Gauntlet. LEGO included all six Infinity Stones, Mind, Power, Reality, Soul, Space, and Time, which is a genuinely thoughtful touch for a set at this size and price point. Pair that with Captain America's Vibranium shield piece and you have two pieces that punch well above the set's simple construction in terms of story value. The aircraft element rounds things out, giving the scene a bit of movement beyond the two figures squaring off, though it is stylized rather than detailed given the junior building system it belongs to.
Fun facts
- 01This is part of LEGO's junior building line, rated four plus, which uses larger pieces and simplified steps designed for a child's first solo or near solo builds.
- 02The set includes all six Infinity Stones on the Infinity Gauntlet piece, Mind, Power, Reality, Soul, Space, and Time, a level of detail not always guaranteed at this size.
- 03At $39.99 USD (also listed at £29.99 and €34.99) for 107 pieces, the price per piece lands around twenty eight to thirty seven cents depending on currency, higher than average for a set this size.
- 04The finished model measures roughly thirteen by fourteen by four centimeters, keeping it compact enough for a small shelf or a kid's backpack.
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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