Klombo
A big friendly dino with real charm, if you can forgive six identical legs.
Brick Rated Score
Set 77077 · 2025
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Klombo is the rare video game tie-in that actually looks great built and sitting on a shelf, all sand blue scales and pink spikes and that goofy open mouth.
The build is genuinely fun until you hit the legs and realise you're making the same one six times over. At 109 dollars for two minifigs it asks a lot, especially next to earlier Fortnite sets that gave you nine. If you love the creature, you'll forgive it fast.
Best for: Fortnite players who want the friendly island dino on their shelf
What it is
Klombo is one of those Fortnite characters people got genuinely attached to, a big passive herbivore who wanders the map, eats berries, and lets you bounce sky-high off the blowhole on its back. So there was real pressure for this LEGO® set to capture that friendly, slightly goofy charm, and honestly, it does. The finished creature is about as expressive as a brick-built animal gets, with a wide opening mouth, a head on a flex joint that actually turns and tilts, six posable legs, and a rotating tail. The back is where the design really sings, layered sand blue scales running bidirectionally with a ridge of dark pink spikes down the spine. It photographs well and it displays even better, which is exactly what you want from a character piece like this.
The catch
Now the price. This set is 1,084 pieces for 109.99 US dollars, 89.99 pounds, or 99.99 euros, which on paper is standard LEGO pricing. The catch is the minifigure count. You get two, Island Adventure Peely and Oro, and while both are nicely printed (Oro's molded head wrap and crown are lovely), the earlier wave of Fortnite sets landed at a similar price with nine figures. So the value math feels a little lopsided, and Brickset flagged the same thing, calling it well-designed but leaving them wanting more for the money. The other honest gripe is the legs. You build six of them and they're near-identical, spread across bags three through five, so the middle third of the build is a bit of a slog if you like variety in your construction. And the mouth, charming as it is, can't fully close the way the digital Klombo's can, so it's stuck in a permanent friendly gape.
Who it's for
Here's the thing though. If you or someone in the house plays Fortnite and has a soft spot for these creatures, the caveats melt away pretty quickly, because the model just makes you happy to look at. It's a satisfying hour and a half of building with genuinely pretty parts, a clever hidden heart tucked inside, and a payoff that earns its shelf space. If you're coming purely as a value-hunting collector counting minifigs per dollar, this one won't win you over, and that's fair. But as a character build with charm to spare, Klombo is an easy set to love. Grab it for the theme, not the spreadsheet.
The parts story
What the build is actually like, and the pieces worth knowing about.
The build opens strong with the central body, which becomes the anchor for everything else, the six legs, the tail, and that flex-jointed head. It's paced nicely across seven bags and runs around ninety minutes. The head is the highlight to assemble, with rows of detailed teeth and a floating hinge that lets the mouth swing open, plus azure leaf pieces fanned out as spines. Then come the legs. You build one, and it's satisfying. You build the second, still fine. By the sixth you know the sequence in your sleep, and since they span three full bags, that's the stretch where the build loses a little momentum. The payoff is a poseable, sturdy creature, so it's worth pushing through.
On parts, there's real interest here for fans. The dark pink spikes down the back appear to be a new element debuting in this set, and the sand blue scale work is used cleverly to build texture rather than just stack plates. Berry-red round pieces make up the little Klomberry bush scenery, and there's a hidden red-tile heart built into the center of the body as a sweet Easter egg. Oro's specialized molded headpiece with its wrap and crown is a standout you won't find in many places. For 1,084 pieces the part-count value is average, but the parts themselves lean unusual and colorful rather than filler, which is what makes the build feel richer than the price-per-piece suggests.
Fun facts
- 01The set was designed by Joss, the winner of LEGO Masters Australia 2022, and it's built as a near brick-for-brick replica of the in-game creature from Fortnite's Lost Isles.
- 02In the game, Klombos are passive herbivores that regenerate 1,000 health per second while taking just 1 damage per shot, which is why players almost never manage to defeat one.
- 03Feeding a Klombo a Klomberry can make it launch an item out of the blowhole on its back, and standing on that blowhole rockets your character high into the air.
- 04A QR code in the instructions lets you redeem the Island Adventure Peely outfit in LEGO Fortnite, and linked accounts get both the Odyssey and Battle Royale versions of the styles.
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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