Glinda’s Wedding Day
Two giant butterflies fold open on a wedding that falls apart in your hands.
Brick Rated Score
Set 75688 · 2025
Affiliate link. We may earn a commission at no extra cost to you.As an Amazon Associate we earn from qualifying purchases.
The two brick built butterflies swinging shut over the altar are a genuinely clever bit of design, and Glinda's swap face gag (delighted, then horrified as the animals crash the ceremony) sells the whole story in one motion.
I just wish there was more holding it together once the butterflies are open, because the scene behind them is thinner than the price tag suggests. This is a set for someone who already loves Wicked's story beats and wants that one specific scene on a shelf, not a general LEGO fan looking for a dense build. If you're picking one Wicked: For Good set and Elphaba's side of the story interests you more, I'd steer you there first.
Best for: Wicked fans who want the wedding-crashing scene captured in miniature, not builders chasing part count
What it is
I'll be honest, the first thing that got me about this set was the mechanism, not the minifigs. You build two big yellow butterflies on swing arms, and closing them over the altar is how you pack the whole wedding away between play sessions. It's a genuinely theatrical touch for a 476 piece set, and it matches the moment from the film where Glinda's big day gets crashed by a stampede of animals. Glinda herself carries the scene: her gown is a single molded piece with silver glitter and butterfly printing, and she comes with two heads so her expression can flip from starry eyed to stricken the second things go wrong.
The catch
Where it gets shakier is everything around that centerpiece. More than one reviewer pointed out that the little gate and staircase at the front of the set do not actually lead anywhere, so displayed on its own the scene feels like a fragment of something bigger rather than a complete build. The butterflies, once open, also end up partly obscuring the cake and floral fountains behind them, which is a shame because those are some of the nicer small details in the set. At 476 pieces and two minidolls plus two animal figures, the piece count to price ratio is fair but not generous, and this isn't a set where you're getting a dense, absorbing build session.
Who it's for
Get this one if you love Wicked specifically and want the wedding scene, the swap faces, and that fold shut butterfly gimmick on your shelf. Skip it if you're LEGO shopping in general and just want the most build for your money, or if the incomplete feeling of a standalone gate to nowhere would bother you. Pairing it with another Wicked set to build out the surrounding scene helps a lot.
The parts story
What the build is actually like, and the pieces worth knowing about.
Building this one is quick and light on tension. Most of your time goes into the two butterfly wings on their Technic swing arms, then the small footprint scene: a handful of steps, a gate, a couple of floral fountains, and a pink tiered cake that looks better than its part count suggests. It is not a build that makes you stop and admire clever engineering, it is a build in service of a display piece and a play gag, and it reads that way the whole way through.
The two heads for Glinda, one delighted and one horrified, are the smartest reuse of parts in the set and do more storytelling than anything else here. Madame Morrible's dress is a new printed piece in a dark green with turquoise tail detailing, and she carries a printed heart shaped wedding invitation that is a nice small touch. The two animal figures, a dog and a squirrel, are the stand ins for the on screen stampede that ruins the day. None of these are rare or especially collectible pieces on their own, but together they make the story land even without dialogue.
Fun facts
- 01The set is built around a real mechanism: closing the two large butterfly halves together packs the wedding scene away for storage or display.
- 02Glinda's minidoll uses a dual head swap, delighted then shocked, since minidolls don't get the dual faced heads regular minifigures can have.
- 03The two animal figures included, a dog and a squirrel, represent the stampede from the Wicked: For Good trailer that crashes the ceremony.
- 04It released September 1, 2025 alongside the rest of the Wicked: For Good wave, priced at $39.99 for 476 pieces.
What other builders say
This write-up is grounded in real reviews and builder discussion, not just one opinion. A few worth reading:
More reviews
All reviews
World Map
The biggest LEGO set ever made, and yes, it's really one enormous mosaic.

Eiffel Tower
The tallest LEGO set ever, and it makes you earn every centimetre.

Titanic
The longest LEGO set ever made, and one of the most rewarding builds I've done.