Darth Maul's Sith Infiltrator
A sleek little Sith ship carried almost entirely by its minifigures.
Brick Rated Score
Set 75383 · 2024
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This is the fifth time LEGO has made the Sith Infiltrator, and the shaping here is the best it has looked at this scale.
The ship itself is lovely, compact and swooshable, but the real reason people bought it is the exclusive 25th anniversary Saw Gerrera, who alone is worth close to half the box. At 70 dollars for 640 pieces it was overpriced at full retail, so this was always a wait-for-a-sale set. If you want that Saw figure and a tidy dark side display piece, it delivers, just do not pay sticker for it.
Best for: Star Wars minifigure collectors chasing the exclusive Saw Gerrera
What it is
The Sith Infiltrator has been made five times now, and I went in expecting to shrug at yet another red-and-black wedge. Instead the shaping got me. This is a smaller model than the 2018 version, about 27cm long, and LEGO used it as an excuse to tighten everything up rather than pad it out. The newer curved and angled parts give the hull a smooth two-tone finish that reads as genuinely sleek, the winglets fold down into a proper landing stance, and the whole thing is light enough to actually swoosh around the room. There is a pair of spring-loaded shooters tucked into the nose that fire when you press ingot tiles on top, and a front hatch that drops three little DRK-1 probe droids on a trigger. It also comes with Maul's Bloodfin speeder, which stows inside the cockpit. As a play object it is honestly charming.
The catch
Here is where I have to be straight with you, because the price is the whole conversation with this set. Seventy dollars for 640 pieces is a rough ratio, and reviewers across the board landed on the same verdict: hard to recommend at full retail. The value is not in the plastic, it is in the four exclusive minifigures, and specifically in Saw Gerrera, who accounts for something like 42 percent of the set's value on his own. Strip the figures out and you have a modest little ship that would feel expensive at 50. There are small letdowns on the figures too. Maul had his pupils removed to match the colored-eye style LEGO uses now, which reads as oddly blank to a lot of people, and the skin-tone-to-robe color matching on Qui-Gon and Anakin is not quite right. None of that is fatal, but at this price you notice.
Who it's for
So who is this actually for. If you collect Star Wars minifigures, this is close to a must, because Saw Gerrera with his printed armor and cloth element is one of the standout figures of the year and he only came in this box. If you want a compact, good-looking dark side ship for a shelf and you catch it on sale, you will be happy. Who should skip it: anyone chasing piece-count value or a big meaty build, because this is a small set wearing a premium price tag. It retired in December 2025 and now sits around 75 to 99 dollars sealed, so the bargain window has mostly closed. Buy it for the figures or wait for a loose deal.
The parts story
What the build is actually like, and the pieces worth knowing about.
The build runs across seven numbered bags and moves in a sensible order, figures and accessories first, then the base, cockpit and winglets. It leans on Technic internally for rigidity while the outer skin stays sleek, and the pacing is pleasant without ever being taxing. This is a couple of relaxed hours, not a weekend project, and it never bogs down in repetition. The one genuinely satisfying moment of engineering is the probe droid trapdoor, which uses a spring-loaded rubber Technic connector and a rounded tile to eject the droids cleanly, no fiddly axle setup required.
The stars of the parts list are the newer curved and angled hull pieces that let LEGO nail the two-color red-and-black profile far better than older versions managed. On the figure side, Saw Gerrera is the prize, with detailed armor printing and a printed cloth back element (the only nag being that the chest piece pushes the cloth out a little far). Qui-Gon and Anakin got fresh face prints, and there is a fun collector footnote here: early 2025 buyers found some copies packed a lighter reddish-brown-bearded Qui-Gon variant, which turned an ordinary figure into a hunted one overnight. For part-count value the set is thin, but for printed-element and exclusive-figure value it punches well above its brick total.
Fun facts
- 01This is the fifth LEGO version of the Sith Infiltrator, timed to the ship's 1999 debut and the 25th anniversary of The Phantom Menace.
- 02The exclusive Saw Gerrera minifigure carries roughly 42 percent of the entire set's value on his own, and all four figures in the box are exclusive to it.
- 03In early 2025 collectors discovered some boxes shipped with a Qui-Gon Jinn sporting a lighter, more reddish-brown beard than standard, turning a common figure into a sought-after variant.
- 04The set retired in December 2025 after about a year and eight months on shelves, and sealed copies now trade above the original 69.99 dollar retail price.
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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