Mini Pokémon Center
The one building this small has ever made me want a whole town of them.
Brick Rated Score
Set 40911 · 2026
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I opened the box expecting a cute trinket and ended up grinning at a nurse's counter with a tiny healing machine on it.
This is a microscale love letter to the games, right down to books on the shelf labeled Red, Green, and Blue, and I did not expect a 233 piece set to hit me with that kind of detail. It costs you 2,500 LEGO Insiders points rather than cash, so the real question is not whether it is good, it is whether you have been banking points and how much you love the Pokemon games specifically over the anime or cards. If you grew up resetting your save file in the Pokemon Center after a bad run against a Gym Leader, this one is going to get you right in the nostalgia.
Best for: Insiders members who grew up with the Game Boy Pokemon titles and collect microscale builds
What it is
I want to start with the thing that surprised me most, because I went in thinking this would be a five minute nothing build and instead I found myself slowing down to look at the details. This is LEGO's Pokemon Center from the games shrunk down to microscale, and it nails the red roof and white walls silhouette instantly. Pull the little lamps on either side of the front wall and the doors slide open, which is a small mechanical trick that punches way above what you'd expect from 233 pieces. Inside there's a nurse's counter, a healing machine, a bench and couch, a glass table, some plants, and Bill's PC tucked in the corner. Then I noticed the bookshelf and the tiny book spines read Red, Green, and Blue, and that is exactly the kind of Easter egg that tells me the designers actually played these games rather than just skimming a wiki.
The catch
Now for the honest caveats. This set was released as a LEGO Insiders Reward for Pokemon Day 2026, part of the franchise's 30th anniversary celebration, which means you cannot just buy it off a shelf. It costs 2,500 Insiders points, so unless you've been racking those up through other purchases, getting one means trading for it on the secondary market where it's been trading for around a hundred dollars. There are also zero minifigures or Pokemon figures included, so you're building a beautifully detailed empty building. And the sticker sheet, while small, has three circular stickers that reviewers flagged as fiddly to line up straight, so go slow with those.
Who it's for
If you're a Pokemon games fan who has points sitting in your Insiders account, or you collect microscale builds and want something with genuine personality, this is worth chasing down. If you were hoping for a display piece with Pikachu and a trainer minifigure standing at the counter, this isn't it, and you'll want to look at LEGO's other Pokemon sets instead.
The parts story
What the build is actually like, and the pieces worth knowing about.
The build itself is quick and calm, four numbered bags and a piece count low enough that this is closer to an evening wind-down build than a weekend project. Nothing about the construction is tricky, it's the kind of set you build while half watching something on TV, right up until you get to the sticker sheet and have to actually pay attention.
The part count value here isn't about rare molds, it's about how much storytelling the designers packed into a tiny footprint. The sliding door mechanism built from a couple of simple lever pieces and a lamp element is the standout bit of engineering, doing double duty as both furniture and function. The microscale furnishings, the healing machine, the PC, the labeled books, are all built from ordinary parts used cleverly rather than anything exotic, which is honestly the more impressive trick.
Fun facts
- 01The set launched February 27, 2026 as a LEGO Insiders Reward tied to Pokemon Day and the franchise's 30th anniversary.
- 02It requires 2,500 LEGO Insiders points to redeem rather than being sold for cash.
- 03The bookshelf inside includes tiny books labeled Red, Green, and Blue, a nod to the original Game Boy titles.
- 04The set includes no minifigures, prompting reviewers to build their own scale comparisons with custom figbashed trainers and Bandai Scale World Pokemon figures.
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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