Star Wars

Jango Fett's Firespray-Class Starship

The ship you used to call Slave I, finally done properly at UCS scale.

4.5 out of 54.5/5

Set 75409 · 2025

Pieces2,970
Minifigs2
Year2025
Set number75409

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The verdict

If you love the prequels or you've been waiting a decade for a Firespray that actually looks the part, this one's an easy yes.

It's a 2,970-piece UCS LEGO® set that nails the tricky curved hull and comes with a genuinely lovely Jango Fett figure. It's not cheap at 300 bucks, and the little Boba fig divides people, but the display piece itself is one of the better UCS ships in years.

Best for: Prequel-era Star Wars fans who want a proper display centerpiece

The full review

What it is

Let me tell you why fans got excited about this one. For years the only proper Firespray was the aging 2015 model, and it never quite captured that awkward, beautiful blade-shape of Jango's ship. This 2,970-piece set fixes that. The hull is rounder, meaner and far more screen-accurate, and when you stand it up on the display stand it genuinely looks like it's about to peel off a landing pad on Kamino. If you grew up on Attack of the Clones, this is the version of the ship your brain always pictured, and the Jango Fett minifig that comes with it is the best LEGO has ever made of the character.

The catch

Now the honest bits. At around $300 it's a proper investment, and it takes up a real chunk of shelf at over 44cm long. The build leans more on stickers than printed pieces, which always feels a little cheap on a premium display set, and while they're conservative in number for a set this size, purists will grumble. There's also some color matching wobble across the darker curved slopes, where different element types don't quite agree on the exact shade. The bigger sticking point is the Young Boba Fett minifig. Jango is fantastic, but little Boba comes across as an afterthought that doesn't match the quality around him. None of this ruins the set, but you should know going in.

Who it's for

So who should grab it? If you're a prequel-era Star Wars fan building a display shelf, or you skipped the old Firespray and always regretted it, this is the one to get. The shaping alone justifies it, and the dual display angles plus the little cockpit play features are a nice bonus. Who should skip it? If you only care about minifigs, two isn't much for the money, and if you already own a decent Firespray and just want the figures, that's a lot to spend for an upgrade. But for most fans of the ship, this is the definitive LEGO take. The community landed around 4.5 out of 5 on Brickset, and honestly that feels right: a strong set with a couple of rough edges.

The parts story

What the build is actually like, and the pieces worth knowing about.

The build is a masterclass in curves, which is exactly what a Firespray needs. You start with a Technic-heavy core, with bricks and pins forming the angled skeleton of the nose and giving you the pivot points for the play features. From there it's all about wrapping that frame in slopes, with the various curved pieces arranged around the core using SNOT (Studs Not On Top) technique to get that smooth blade shape. It's a satisfying, section-by-section build that keeps introducing new little sub-assemblies, from the cockpit to the winglets to the display stand, so it rarely drags the way big grey-heavy UCS ships sometimes can.

On pieces, there's real stuff for parts nerds here. The set brings four new molds, headlined by a big 18 x 8 x 6 windscreen in trans-clear for the cockpit, plus a new rangefinder element in light bluish gray. Add a pile of recolors and a load of useful curved slopes (the newer slope palette from the last decade is a big reason the shape works so well), and it's a genuinely useful haul. The one non-minifig print is the 8 x 16 info plaque tile, so the rest of the decoration comes down to stickers. At 2,970 pieces for about $300, that's roughly a dime a part, which is respectable for a licensed UCS set of this size.

Fun facts

  • 01This ship used to be called Slave I, but Disney quietly dropped that name from all products around 2021, and The Book of Boba Fett rebranded it simply as the Firespray-class.
  • 02The same ship shows up in both Attack of the Clones (as Jango's) and The Empire Strikes Back (as Boba's), just in different paint jobs, since Boba inherited and repainted it after Jango's death.
  • 03Early buyers who grabbed it during LEGO Insiders access qualified for the 40765 Kamino Training Facility gift-with-purchase.
  • 04The finished model runs over 44cm (17.5in) long and can be displayed either flat in landing mode or tilted upright in flight pose, with the wings staying horizontal either way.

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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