Glinda & Elphaba Visit Munchkinland
A warm-toned Munchkin cottage with a gorgeous roof and one honest weak spot.
Brick Rated Score
Set 75690 · 2025
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The red brick-built roof on this one genuinely won me over, it curves and tucks around the turret entrance in a way that feels hand-shaped rather than snapped together.
It is the calmest, most display-friendly set of the Wicked: For Good wave, and for around seventy dollars with three minidolls and a full furnished interior I think the value holds up. The catch is the back, which is completely open and unfinished, and the fact that Glinda's famous bubble is only half here. If you love the film or you want a fairy-tale cottage that fits a wider display, it is easy to recommend. If you want the showpiece Wicked set, this is not it.
Best for: Wicked fans and playhouse-cottage lovers who display from the front
What it is
This is the Munchkin cottage from Wicked: For Good, a two-story house with a big brick-built red roof, a turret-style entrance, and Glinda's bubble throne parked out front. I will be straight with you, I went in expecting the least interesting set of the Wicked wave, and the roof is what changed my mind. It is built in a clever, organic way, curving around the tower entrance so the black-windowed section slots perfectly into the surrounding turret. The warm red and reddish-orange tiles against the muted light nougat walls give it a proper storybook, warm-toned feeling that would sit happily in a medieval or fantasy display even if you had never heard of the musical.
The catch
Now the honest caveats, and there are a few. The most talked-about complaint is the back of the house, which is left completely open and unfinished. From the front it photographs like a real cottage, but walk around it and the illusion drops away, and a lot of builders wish LEGO had done hinged sections that swing open instead. The second sore point is Glinda's bubble, because you only get half of it here rather than the full sphere, which feels like a miss for such a signature piece of the story. And the tan-and-nougat wall blend, while I personally did not mind it, does read as a slightly muddy mix up close for some people. At roughly seventy dollars for 744 pieces the value is fair rather than generous, but the three minidolls and the furnished interior do a lot of heavy lifting.
Who it's for
So who should get this. If you are a Wicked fan, or you specifically love playhouse-style cottages with a fully kitted-out interior, this delivers exactly that: a kitchen with a rug, a den, a bedroom, and a bathroom with a satisfying swinging door. It is also the most versatile Wicked release for general fairy-tale display because the cottage stands on its own charm. I would steer you away if you want the definitive, screen-accurate showpiece of the line, or if an open unfinished back is a dealbreaker for how you display. For everyone in between, it is a very good set with two honest flaws you should know about going in.
The parts story
What the build is actually like, and the pieces worth knowing about.
The build is a gentle, pleasant one rather than a technical workout, and the roof is where it comes alive. Getting those angled sections to curve around the turret entrance is the standout sequence, the kind of moment where you finish a slope and actually sit back to look at it. The two floors go up quickly, and the interior details keep it engaging, with a kitchen counter and rug on the ground floor and a more open upper level split into bathroom, den, and bedroom. The swinging bathroom door fitting into such a tiny space was a genuinely pleasant surprise for me.
For parts, the value is in the warm-toned roof slopes and the mix of red and reddish-orange tiles that give the cottage its character, plus a brick-built trans-clear wand for Glinda that is a fun little build in itself. The three minidolls are the real draw: Elphaba in her For Good outfit with a toy broomstick, Glinda in her tiara, and Boq rounding out the trio. There is also a lovely printed touch, a large suspended poster on the end of the house showing a minidoll-ified take on the anti-witch propaganda poster from the film, which is exactly the kind of storytelling detail I love finding in a set.
Fun facts
- 01The set is part of the Wicked: For Good wave and released on September 1, 2025, tied to the second film.
- 02A large poster hung on the end of the house recreates the film's anti-witch propaganda art, redrawn with a minidoll-ified figure.
- 03Only half of Glinda's famous bubble is included, which became the single most common complaint among reviewers.
- 04Elphaba comes in her Wicked: For Good outfit complete with a toy broomstick accessory.
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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