Animal Crossing

Creative Houses: Seasons of Fun

Two cozy houses and four little seasons you can swap in and out whenever the mood strikes.

Brick Rated Score

3.9 out of 53.9/5

Set 77057 · 2025

Pieces814
Minifigs3
Year2025
Set number77057

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The verdict

The thing that won me over here is the swappable seasonal modules, because they turn one static build into four different little moods you can rotate through the year.

You get Stitches, Fuchsia and Fang, two houses that stack into a two-story home or sit side by side, and a moving cart for that very Animal Crossing ritual of packing up and relocating. The build is simple and aimed squarely at younger hands, and at 90 dollars it is not cheap for the part count. If you adore the game's cozy customization loop, this captures it beautifully.

Best for: Animal Crossing fans who love rearranging and decorating more than they love complex engineering

The full review

What it is

I have a soft spot for anything that lets you fuss over a little home, and Creative Houses: Seasons of Fun leans all the way into that. It is an Animal Crossing set built around two small houses and, more importantly, four seasonal modules you physically swap in and out. Spring gives you flowers blooming in the window boxes, summer lays out a picnic on the lawn, autumn brings pumpkins and colored leaves, and winter drops in snowballs and a friendly snowman. It is such a direct translation of what the game actually feels like, that slow drift of decorating your space as the calendar turns, and the first time I clicked the winter module into place I genuinely grinned.

The catch

I will be honest with you about the sticking points, though. This is 814 pieces for 89.99 dollars, and that math lands on the expensive side even when you account for the Nintendo license everyone pays a premium for. The build is also gentle. It moves quickly, the techniques stay simple, and the bags are clearly labeled with easy-to-follow instructions, all of which is lovely for a seven-year-old and a little thin if you are an adult who lives for fiddly engineering. This is a playset that happens to look sweet on a shelf, not a display piece that happens to be playable, and it helps to know which one you are buying.

Who it's for

So who should get this. If you or the kid you build with loves the game's decorating and rearranging loop, this is a warm, generous little world, and the seasonal swap gives it more staying power than most sets this size. The two houses stacking into a two-story home and the moving cart add real play value, and Stitches, Fuchsia and Fang are charming company. If you mostly build for complex techniques, or you want maximum pieces for your money, I would steer you toward one of the larger Animal Crossing houses instead and let this one go to the people who will actually play with the seasons.

The parts story

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

Building this is calm and friendly rather than demanding. The bags are labeled and the instructions are clear enough that a young builder can mostly go it alone, while still asking enough to feel like a real project rather than busywork. Because the whole thing is designed around swappable modules, a lot of the fun is in the fittings and the small decorated scenes rather than any big structural moment. You spend your time furnishing rooms and populating the seasonal trays, which is exactly the point.

The standout parts are the accessories and the seasonal detailing: the snowman and snowballs, the pumpkin and autumn leaves, the summer picnic spread, and the spring flowers tucked into window boxes. Animal Crossing figures use that distinctive larger character body rather than a standard minifigure, so Stitches, Fuchsia and Fang bring some lovely printed detail, and each comes with their own furniture. It is not a set you buy to raid for rare technical elements. It is one you buy for a cheerful pile of printed and molded decorative pieces that do a genuinely good job of looking like the game.

Fun facts

  • 01The set includes four interchangeable seasonal modules, one each for spring, summer, autumn and winter, so the same house can be redecorated as the year turns.
  • 02The two houses can be stacked into a single two-story home or arranged side by side, and a moving cart is included for classic Animal Crossing house-moving role play.
  • 03The three characters are Stitches the bear, Fuchsia the deer and Fang the wolf, each packaged with their own furniture.
  • 04Released in 2025 at 89.99 dollars, the set is projected to retire around mid-2027.

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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