Star Wars

Clone Shock Trooper Mech

A pocket mech in Shock Trooper red and white, fun for about as long as it took to build.

Brick Rated Score

3.4 out of 53.4/5

Set 75448 · 2026

Pieces151
Minifigs1
Year2026
Set number75448

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The verdict

I like this little guy more than I expected to, honestly, the red and white armor plating reads as unmistakably Clone Shock Trooper the second you snap the chest piece on.

But I will not pretend the fixed knees and elbows don't bug me, a mech that can't bend its legs is a mech that can only really do one pose. This is a fifteen dollar impulse pickup for a six year old or a completionist who wants every mech in the line, not a display centerpiece. If you go in expecting a quick, cheerful desk toy instead of an engineering showcase, you'll have a good time with it.

Best for: young clone trooper fans and completionists chasing every Star Wars mech, not display collectors

The full review

What it is

I'll say this straight away, the shape works. LEGO gave this mech real Clone Shock Trooper armor, the red chest and helmet stripe against white plating, and it actually looks like it stepped out of the show rather than a generic robot wearing a paint job. For 151 pieces and fifteen dollars, that's a genuine win, and it's the kind of thing that makes a kid's eyes light up on a store shelf.

The catch

Here's where I have to be honest with you though. The knees and elbows are fixed, so once you've got the mech standing, that's basically your pose. You can angle the hips and shoulders a bit and the feet swivel, but there's no crouching, no lunging, none of the dynamic action shots you'd want to stage. Reviewers across the board flagged the same two things I noticed, the gray kneecaps peeking through the red and white scheme where the joint had to go bare plastic, and the stud shooter bolted onto the arm that never quite looks like it belongs there. It works, it just doesn't look designed in from the start.

Who it's for

Get this one if you're buying for a kid who wants a quick, satisfying build and a fun little mech to march around the living room, or if you're the type of collector working through every Star Wars mech LEGO has released. Skip it if you already own a couple of these small mechs and want something meaningfully different, because the format and its limitations are starting to feel familiar.

The parts story

What the build is actually like, and the pieces worth knowing about.

The build itself is quick and modular, legs, torso, arms and cockpit all snap together as separate chunks before you join them into the finished mech, which makes it a good confidence builder for a newer LEGO fan working without much help. There's no instruction-following slog here, you're done in well under an hour and holding a finished toy, not a shelf piece you're afraid to touch.

Nothing in the parts list will make a serious collector's jaw drop, this is a small set built mostly from standard Technic-style connector pieces and basic plates in red, white and gray. The blaster rifle with its stud shooter is the one specialty element, and it's also the one piece everyone had complaints about since it clips on rather than integrating into the arm design. At 151 pieces for fifteen dollars you're paying roughly a dime a piece, which is fair for the category, but you're buying a toy here, not a parts pack worth raiding for your own creations.

Fun facts

  • 01The set includes a Clone Shock Trooper minifigure that is a direct reuse of the figure LEGO first released in 2023 and 2024 sets, not a new mold or print.
  • 02The mech is designed for ages 6 and up and LEGO markets it as a quick, posable build rather than a display model.
  • 03BrickEconomy projects the set will retire around mid 2027, giving it a fairly typical shelf life for a budget Star Wars mech.
  • 04The blaster rifle stores by clipping to the back of the mech when not in the trooper's hands, a small touch aimed at keeping the piece from getting lost.

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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