Durrr Burger Restaurant
The greasiest landmark in Fortnite, shrunk down to a fun little corner shop.
Brick Rated Score
Set 77076 · 2025
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I have a soft spot for a set that knows exactly what it is, and this cheeky little burger joint made me grin the whole way through.
The easter eggs are the best part, from the dynamite in the attic to the fried egg on the table, and the four minifigs are genuinely fun to have on a shelf. My honest hesitation is the size for the money, because at 546 pieces it builds up smaller than the box art has you picturing. If you or the kid in your life plays Fortnite and loves the Durrr Burger head, you will adore this. If you want a big statement centerpiece, look elsewhere.
Best for: Fortnite players who grew up on the Durrr Burger head landmark
What it is
The Durrr Burger head has been a Fortnite in-joke since 2018, when a giant version of it literally showed up in the California desert as a marketing stunt, so seeing it finally become a proper LEGO restaurant made me happy in a slightly ridiculous way. What you get is a compact two-level burger joint with a hinged shop door, a condiment station, a soda machine, a cash register, and an outdoor seating area, plus a removable attic stuffed with secrets. It is bright, it is cheeky, and it captures the greasy charm of the source material really well. The moment that got me was flipping off the attic roof and finding dynamite and a spider tucked inside, because that is exactly the kind of chaotic detail Fortnite fans clock instantly.
The catch
I do want to be straight with you about the value, because it is the one thing reviewers keep circling back to. At 64.99 US dollars for 546 pieces, this lands as a small set for the money, and once it is on the shelf it reads more like a corner kiosk than the sprawling landmark you remember dropping into. The building is too tight to actually pose a proper battle inside, so the play pattern is more about the details and the figures than staging big scenes. It also skews young, which is completely fair given the theme, but it does mean adult collectors chasing a display piece might feel a little short-changed once the novelty settles.
Who it's for
So here is how I would call it. If you play Fortnite, or you are buying for someone who does, this is an easy yes, because the character recognition and the easter eggs will land every single time and the Beef Boss skin open up (a QR code in the instructions) is a nice bonus. It also works beautifully as a modular piece if you already build a little LEGO street and want a fast food joint to drop in. If you are a purely display-focused collector who wants scale and heft for your money, I would either wait for a discount or skip it, because the perceived value at full price is the weak spot everyone agrees on.
The parts story
What the build is actually like, and the pieces worth knowing about.
The build itself is breezy and satisfying, the kind of afternoon project you can knock out in a couple of hours without ever feeling lost. There is a bit of proper modularity here, with finished components you can rearrange, and the masonry brick walls, the window panes and the hinged door all come together cleanly. The blue and orange accents are placed so cleverly that you can swap sections around without breaking the color logic, which is a genuinely thoughtful touch for a set pitched at kids.
For parts nerds there are a couple of real treats. The set introduces new green droid hands, which debut here alongside the companion 77077 Klombo set, and it brings solid-color window panes in blue for the first time ever, so this is the cheapest ticket to those. Beef Boss with his printed burger head is the standout figure, and the fried egg, the cup, the shovel and the little spider all pull their weight as recognizable in-game props. At roughly twelve cents a piece it is not a parts bargain, but the printed and new elements are what you are really paying for.
Fun facts
- 01The Durrr Burger head became a real-world legend in July 2018 when Epic planted a giant version in the desert near Palmdale, California, as part of an alternate reality game teasing Fortnite Chapter 1 Season 5.
- 02Beef Boss, the burger-headed mascot in this set, first hit the Fortnite Item Shop on August 10, 2018 for 1,500 V-Bucks, and Durrr Burger's long-running rival in the game is Tomatohead's Pizza Pit.
- 03The set includes a QR code in the building instructions that opens up a Beef Boss outfit inside the LEGO Fortnite video game.
- 04The green droid hands in this set were brand new for 2025 and appear only here and in the companion 77077 Klombo set.
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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