Death Trooper & Night Trooper Battle Pack
Two Imperial squads, one small box, and honestly, that's the whole appeal.
Brick Rated Score
Set 75412 · 2025
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This is a battle pack doing exactly what a battle pack is supposed to do, giving you four menacing Imperial figures for the price of a fast food meal so your army actually looks like an army on the shelf.
I like that it pairs the classic black-armored Death Troopers with the Night Troopers, whose darker, more tactical look grew out of the Andor era and reads as genuinely distinct from the older mold rather than a repaint excuse. There's no vehicle and barely a scene here, just troopers and their gear, so don't go in expecting a build experience. Buy it for the figures, stack a few together, and you'll get why collectors keep battle packs like this in a separate bin from everything else.
Best for: Star Wars minifig collectors building out an Imperial squad, not display-piece hunters
What it is
I'll be honest about what this set is before I tell you why I still like it: it's four Imperial minifigures, some blasters, and barely anything else. Two Death Troopers in that matte black armor from Rogue One, two Night Troopers in the more angular, tactical-looking gear that came out of the Andor show, and that's the whole cast. No speeder, no checkpoint, no little scene to pose them in. If you came here hoping for a build experience, this isn't it, and I don't want to oversell that part.
The catch
What it is good at is quietly filling out an army. Anyone who collects Star Wars minifigs knows the frustration of owning one trooper and wanting a squad, and that's the gap this closes. The Night Trooper figure especially caught my eye, it's not just a black repaint of the Death Trooper, the helmet shape and printing read as their own design, which is more than I expected from a pack this size. At 119 pieces it's light, but a decent chunk of that count is accessories and weapons rather than filler.
Who it's for
Get this if you already have an Andor or Rogue One vehicle sitting around and want the troop numbers to match, or if you're building a shelf of Imperial forces and need bodies more than scenery. Skip it if you're new to the theme and want your first Star Wars purchase to feel like a real build, because there's almost no construction here to sink into. This is a supporting purchase, not a headline one, and it knows it.
The parts story
What the build is actually like, and the pieces worth knowing about.
There isn't much of a build to speak of here, which is normal for a battle pack. You're mostly assembling the figures themselves and clipping together their blasters and gear, so this is a five to ten minute affair rather than an evening project. If you're buying this for a kid who wants to jump straight into playing out Imperial patrol scenes, that's actually a plus, there's no waiting around for a big model to finish before the fun starts.
The real value is in the printing on the two trooper types. The Death Trooper keeps its familiar all-black stormtrooper-style armor with the weathered, matte finish LEGO has used since Rogue One, while the Night Trooper brings sharper armor plating and different helmet detailing that ties it to the Andor show's more grounded, shadow-ops Imperial forces. Getting both side by side in one box is the whole reason to pick this up, it's a cheap way to double your Imperial trooper count without buying two separate larger sets just to get the figures out of them.
Fun facts
- 01Death Troopers first appeared on screen in Rogue One: A Star Wars Story (2016) as elite Imperial special forces assigned to protect high-value intelligence.
- 02Night Troopers were introduced as part of the Andor television series, giving LEGO a new in-universe reason to expand its all-black Imperial trooper lineup beyond the original Death Trooper design.
- 03Battle packs like this one are LEGO's standard way of letting Star Wars collectors build up matching squads affordably, since most larger vehicle sets only include one or two figures each.
- 04The set falls under LEGO Star Wars theme ID 158, one of the longest continuously running LEGO licensed themes since it launched in 1999.
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