Drift & Raven Figures
Two blocky little characters that punch way above their brick count.
Brick Rated Score
Set 40884 · 2025
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I sat down expecting a quick fifteen minute build and ended up turning both figures over in my hands for a lot longer than that, checking the little printed details before I'd even glued them mentally into a shelf spot.
Drift and Raven both get that classic BrickHeadz charm, the oversized square head, the tiny stubby legs, the personality packed into a shape that has no business being this expressive. For 280 pieces split across two figures you get a genuinely satisfying double build, not a padded single set with filler. It is a display piece first and a build second, so if you want wheels turning or arms swinging, this is not that.
Best for: BrickHeadz collectors and anyone who wants a fast, characterful desk build without committing a whole weekend
What it is
I sat down expecting a quick fifteen minute build and ended up turning both figures over in my hands for a lot longer than that, checking the little printed details before I'd even found them a shelf spot. Drift and Raven both get that classic BrickHeadz charm, the oversized square head, the tiny stubby legs, the personality packed into a shape that has no business being this expressive. For 280 pieces split across two figures you get a genuinely satisfying double build, not a padded single set with filler stretched thin.
The catch
Here is the honest part. This is a display piece first and a build second, so if you are hoping for poseable arms, moving parts, or a play feature, you will not find one here, the BrickHeadz line has never been about that and this set does not try to be an exception. The build itself, while charming, follows the same basic construction logic every BrickHeadz set uses, so if you already own a few of these, nothing here will surprise your hands even if the finished look does.
Who it's for
This one is for the collector who has a BrickHeadz shelf going and wants to keep the run alive, or for someone who wants a fun weekend project that will not eat the whole weekend. If you are looking for a big detailed centerpiece build or a set with real interactivity, put your money toward a larger set instead and treat this as the fun add-on it is.
The parts story
What the build is actually like, and the pieces worth knowing about.
Building BrickHeadz is its own particular pleasure. There is no instruction manual anxiety here, no hunting through three hundred nearly identical dark bley pieces, it is stacking and clicking in short satisfying bursts, and watching a face and a personality emerge out of a cube. With two figures in the box, you get that little dopamine hit of completion twice, which makes this a genuinely nice one to hand a newer builder or a kid who wants to feel finished with something quickly.
The pieces themselves are mostly familiar BrickHeadz staples, the signature 2x2 round headed brick, small printed tiles for the face, and simple stacked bricks and slopes for the body and any character specific accessories. The value here is less about rare or exclusive molds and more about efficiency, 280 pieces across two figures keeps both builds lean without feeling stripped down, and the printed detailing is where the real character work happens rather than in complicated shaping.
Fun facts
- 01BrickHeadz launched as its own LEGO line in 2017 and built its whole identity around exaggerated, chibi style proportions, an oversized square head on a small blocky body.
- 02Two figure BrickHeadz packs like this one are a common format for the line, letting LEGO pair characters together in a single box rather than selling them separately.
- 03The line deliberately skips traditional minifig parts, using its own dedicated head, hand, and foot elements to keep that signature cube shaped silhouette consistent across every character it has ever made.
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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