Dodge Challenger SRT Hellcat Sports Car
A muscle car that hides its cleverest tricks under a deceptively plain shell.
Brick Rated Score
Set 77237 · 2025
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This one snuck up on me.
From across the room it looks like a simple lime and black slab on wheels, but the second I started building I realized almost every flat panel is actually two or three plates angled together to fake a smooth surface, and it works. I love that Speed Champions finally ditched stickers here, everything you see is molded or printed, which makes the finished car feel far more premium than 390 pieces usually buys you. If you want a quick, satisfying build with a genuinely fun paint scheme, this is one of the better Speed Champions releases in a while, though I will say the building itself takes more attention than the boxy shape lets on.
Best for: Muscle car fans and Speed Champions collectors who want a fun weeknight build with zero stickers
What it is
The Dodge Challenger SRT Hellcat showed up in Speed Champions in August 2025, and it is one of those sets that looks almost too simple in the box photo. Lime green and black color blocking, boxy muscle car proportions, nothing flashy. Then you start snapping pieces together and realize LEGO's designers packed real technique into every panel. The hood, the fenders, the rear haunches, they are all built from smaller angled plates stacked to fake one continuous curved surface, and the trick actually works from a few feet away.
The catch
I will be honest about the price versus piece count. At around 27 dollars for 390 pieces, you are not getting a deal by part-count standards, you are paying for the engineering and the printed parts. A few reviewers and forum builders also pointed out spots where a panel is only held on by a single stud connection, which made them nervous about the car surviving regular shelf handling or a kid picking it up often. It held together fine in my experience, but it is worth knowing before you buy if durability matters to you.
Who it's for
Get this one if you love muscle cars or you are chasing a complete Speed Champions shelf, the color scheme and the no-sticker finish make it stand out next to older entries in the line. Skip it if you specifically want a huge part count to justify the price, or if you need a bulletproof build for a young kid who is rough on models.
The parts story
What the build is actually like, and the pieces worth knowing about.
Building this one is a lesson in not judging a car by its silhouette. The exterior reads as flat and simple, but almost every panel is actually a cluster of plates and slopes mounted at slightly different angles to create one smooth flush line, and figuring out how those little sub-assemblies click together is genuinely satisfying rather than tedious. The headlights use 1x1 clips turned sideways instead of the usual round tiles, and that small swap makes the front end look noticeably closer to the real car.
The standout piece for me is the new printed 1x3 plate with a groove carrying the silver Dodge logo, which is the first time that particular element has ever been printed. There are also exclusive lime green recolors scattered through the build, including curved slopes and a bracket piece, plus a pair of new 1x3 curved slopes that shape the front fascia. The driver minifigure comes with a new printed SRT jacket that has a skeleton driving a flaming muscle car on the back, a fun detail that alone makes the figure worth grabbing even outside the set.
Fun facts
- 01This is the first Speed Champions set ever released with zero stickers, every graphic is either molded or printed directly onto the pieces.
- 02The new printed 1x3 plate with a groove carrying the Dodge logo marks the first time that specific element has received printing.
- 03The minifigure's SRT-branded jacket has a skeleton driving a flame-shooting muscle car printed on the back.
- 04The headlights use sideways-mounted 1x1 clips instead of the round tiles LEGO traditionally used on Speed Champions cars, giving a more accurate look.
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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