Star Wars

Luke's Landspeeder

A pocket-sized X-34 landspeeder with a smart-tag twist that splits the room.

Brick Rated Score

3.4 out of 53.4/5

Set 75420 · 2026

Pieces215
Minifigs3
Year2026
Set number75420

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The verdict

I picked this one up expecting a straightforward little Tatooine runabout, and what I got instead was LEGO testing the waters with something new, a SMART Play set where the figures are brick-built rather than classic minifigures and a smart tag ties into extra content.

I respect the ambition, but I'll be honest, it left me a little torn. The landspeeder itself is charming in hand, the price per piece is genuinely fair, and there's a blue milk piece and a service station accessory that made me smile. It's best for younger Star Wars fans easing into the hobby or completists who want the novelty, not for builders chasing a serious display piece.

Best for: younger Star Wars fans and completists curious about LEGO's new SMART Play format

The full review

What it is

I'll be straight with you, this is not the landspeeder set I pictured when I heard the name. Luke's Landspeeder is part of a new Star Wars SMART Play subtheme, and the headline change is that the figures riding along are brick-built rather than the printed minifigures the theme is known for. There's a smart tag built into the model too, which is LEGO's way of linking a physical set to extra digital content. The little service station accessory and the blue milk piece are the details that actually got me, they capture that dusty, thirsty Tatooine feeling in a way a plain vehicle build wouldn't.

The catch

Here's the honest part. At 215 pieces for around forty dollars, the price per piece is legitimately good value, and I appreciated that going in. But the model itself is compact, just 16 by 11 by 4 centimeters, so don't expect a shelf centerpiece. And the brick-built figures are the thing I keep circling back to. If you grew up collecting the printed minifigures from this theme, swapping them for chunkier brick-built versions is going to feel like a step sideways rather than forward, and the modest 3.2 out of 5 community rating on Brickset tells me I'm not alone in that reaction.

Who it's for

Get this one if you're buying for a younger builder who'll enjoy the smart tag interactivity, or if you collect every Tatooine vehicle LEGO puts out and want the novelty piece for the shelf. Skip it if you're after a serious minifigure-scale landspeeder or a display build, this is a lighter, more experimental take and it plays that way.

The parts story

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

The build itself moves fast given the low piece count, and it's clearly aimed at a younger or newer builder rather than someone chasing an afternoon of technique. The landspeeder's hover-rail shaping comes together quickly, and there's just enough Tatooine texture around it, sandy tones, a little service station structure, to make the scene feel lived in rather than a vehicle floating on a baseplate.

The standout pieces are really about theme flavor rather than rare molds, the blue milk piece is a nice nod for anyone who knows the reference, and the service station accessory gives the set a bit of narrative that a bare landspeeder wouldn't have on its own. The bigger talking point is structural, this set swaps the usual printed minifigures for brick-built figures as part of the new SMART Play approach, plus a smart tag for linked content, so the piece count includes build elements collectors haven't seen paired with this theme before. It's a different kind of value proposition than a standard Star Wars set, you're paying for the experiment as much as the parts.

Fun facts

  • 01Luke's Landspeeder launched as part of a new Star Wars SMART Play subtheme, LEGO's first attempt at pairing this theme with brick-built figures and smart tag technology instead of standard printed minifigures.
  • 02Despite being a Star Wars licensed set, it carries a strong price per piece of roughly 16.3p in the UK and 18.6 cents in the US, better value by the piece than many same-priced sets in the theme.
  • 03The set includes a small service station accessory and a blue milk piece, both nods to the everyday details of life on Tatooine rather than just the vehicle itself.
  • 04It launched to a modest 3.2 out of 5 average rating from early Brickset reviewers, reflecting a mixed response to the brick-built figure format among longtime Star Wars collectors.

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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