Cobb Vanth's Speeder
A small speeder that hides a big surprise in its trunk.
Brick Rated Score
Set 75437 · 2026
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The first thing I did with this one wasn't build it, it was flip open that hidden compartment under the seat and grin at what LEGO tucked inside.
That little storage trick, holding a tiny Boba Fett helmet and an even tinier bantha milk carton, is the kind of detail that makes a small set feel thought through rather than rushed. At 207 pieces this isn't going to occupy your evening, but the two minifigures carry real weight here, especially Cobb Vanth suited up in Boba Fett's armor with the jetpack on his back. This is a set for the minifigure collector and the desk-shelf display fan, not for someone chasing a big build.
Best for: Star Wars minifigure collectors who want Cobb Vanth in Boba Fett's armor without buying a bigger set
What it is
This one is built around a moment, not a spectacle. Cobb Vanth's Speeder recreates the little skiff he rides while wearing Boba Fett's armor and helmet, and the set knows that the figure is the star. Cobb comes dressed head to toe in that battered Mandalorian armor with a jetpack strapped on, and Cad Bane rides along with a blaster pistol in each hand. If you have been collecting the Star Wars minifigure line, this pair fills a real gap on the shelf.
The catch
I will be honest about the build itself, there is not much of one. At 207 pieces this goes together in well under an hour, and the model is more vehicle sketch than vehicle. The $34.99 asking price means you are paying close to 17 cents a piece, which is on the steep side for a set this size, so the value here lives almost entirely in the minifigures rather than the parts count. If you are the kind of builder who wants an evening of engineering, this will feel over before it starts.
Who it's for
Get this one if you collect Star Wars figures or want Cobb Vanth in that armor specifically, the hidden compartment detail alone makes it worth a look. Skip it if you are shopping by piece count or want a display vehicle with real presence, there are bigger and more characterful Star Wars sets at a similar price that will satisfy that itch better.
The parts story
What the build is actually like, and the pieces worth knowing about.
Building this is quick work, a compact chassis, a seat, a pair of steering vanes you can angle by hand, and a clip molded to hold Cobb's pistol when he is not carrying it. The whole thing snaps together fast enough that most of your time goes to posing the figures rather than following steps.
The real standout is that under-seat storage bay. Popping it open to find a tiny printed Boba Fett helmet and a little bantha milk carton hiding inside is the kind of callback that rewards fans who know the scene, and it is a nicer touch than you'd expect from a set this size. Cobb Vanth's armor printing and the jetpack piece are the other highlights, giving you a Mandalorian-armor Cobb Vanth minifigure you cannot easily get elsewhere, while Cad Bane's dual pistols round out a pair that is worth more to a collector than the brick count alone suggests.
Fun facts
- 01The speeder is based on the vehicle Cobb Vanth rides while wearing Boba Fett's armor in The Mandalorian
- 02The hidden storage compartment holds two tiny accessories, a miniature Boba Fett helmet and a bantha milk carton
- 03Cobb Vanth's minifigure includes a jetpack, a blaster pistol, and Boba Fett's armor and helmet
- 04Cad Bane is included as the second minifigure, armed with two blaster pistols
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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