Jango Fett's Starship
The same lovely ship as Boba's, minus the price that made it a bargain.
Brick Rated Score
Set 75433 · 2025
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This is the playscale Firespray done a second time, and honestly LEGO tightened up the little things: a rounder nose, four stud shooters instead of two, and that satisfying rear hatch that drops seismic charges.
The build is genuinely fun and the rotating cockpit still delights me every single time. My hesitation is all about the ask, because seventy dollars for a ship that ends up feeling small stings when its 2021 twin was so much cheaper. Worth it if you want the Attack of the Clones roster, harder to justify if you already own Boba's version.
Best for: Prequel-era fans who want Jango, young Boba and the first Lama Su minifig
What it is
The first thing I did when I opened this one was set it right next to my old Boba Fett's Starship from 2021, because they are so clearly cousins. The silhouette is the same playscale Firespray, but this Jango version is not a lazy recolour. The nose is where it got me: LEGO threw a lot more parts at that front curve and it genuinely reads rounder and more accurate now. Add the deeper blues and grays of Jango's paint job and you have a ship that looks the part sitting on a shelf, wings rotating down into landing mode with that lovely self-levelling cockpit that keeps your pilot upright the whole way. I grinned. I always grin at that mechanism.
The catch
So I want to love it without reservation, but I have to be straight with you about the money. The 2021 model's quiet superpower was its price, and that did not survive the trip to Jango's hangar. Seventy dollars gets you 707 pieces, which sounds fine until you notice how many of those pieces disappear into a chunky display cart that props the ship up rather than adding to the ship itself. Strip that away and the actual starship feels smaller than the box and the price tag lead you to expect. Reviewers keep circling the same question and so do I: who is this for? For an adult collector, a more detailed Starship Collection scale would satisfy more. As a pure kid's toy, the play functions are good but not deep enough to fully carry the cost. It sits in an odd middle.
Who it's for
Here is where I land. If you missed Boba's version back in 2021, or you specifically want the Attack of the Clones lineup on your shelf, this is an easy yes. The minifig selection alone makes a strong case, and I will get to those in a second. If you already own the sand green Boba ship, though, look hard at the two side by side before you spend, because the differences are real but modest, and you may decide your money is better aimed at a ship you do not already have on the shelf. It is a good set with a fair build and genuinely charming functions. It is just priced like the bargain it used to be and is not anymore, and that gap is the whole story here.
The parts story
What the build is actually like, and the pieces worth knowing about.
Building it is a breezy, pleasant afternoon rather than a challenge, and that suits the set fine. The bulk of the interest lives in the nose reconstruction, where a cluster of small curved and angled parts coax out that improved front profile, and in the wing-rotation gearing that keeps the cockpit level as the ship shifts from flight to landing. That linkage is the cleverest thing in the box and the part I most enjoyed assembling. The seismic-charge hatch at the rear runs on a simple sliding brick mechanism that lets two charges drop on cue, and the four stud shooters tuck in without wrecking the lines.
The real treasure is in the minifig bags. You get Jango Fett with his new rangefinder element, a double-sided head and a hair piece under the helmet, plus young Boba, and both are essentially the UCS figures (Jango just loses his printed arms). The headline is Lama Su, the LEGO debut of the character and only the second Kaminoan figure ever made, carrying a brand new head mould with that fin around the neck, a printed torso and a printed skirt piece. For prequel collectors that figure alone is a genuine pull. Price per piece lands around ten cents, which reads reasonable on paper, though the display cart is quietly padding that number.
Fun facts
- 01This is effectively the second run of the playscale Firespray, closely mirroring 2021's 75312 Boba Fett's Starship but with a reworked nose, four stud shooters instead of two, and a seismic-charge drop hatch.
- 02Lama Su makes his LEGO debut here as only the second Kaminoan minifigure ever produced, after Taun We, complete with a new head mould and printed skirt piece.
- 03In Attack of the Clones the ship is technically a Firespray-31, but fans and even the movie's marketing long called it Slave I, which is why reviewers keep joking about 'Slave I 2'.
- 04The set launched on August 1, 2025 at $69.99, and its secondary-market value actually dipped in the months after release rather than climbing.
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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