Star Wars

Obi-Wan Kenobi's Jedi Starfighter

The little red Delta-7 that finally gave us a Kaminoan minifig.

Brick Rated Score

4.0 out of 54.0/5

Set 75333 · 2022

Pieces282
Minifigs2
Year2022
Set number75333

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The verdict

This one won me over on the minifigures more than the ship, and I'm okay with that.

The starfighter itself is sharp in white and dark red with lime green engine flashes, but the real headline is Taun We, the first Kaminoan LEGO has ever made, arriving exactly twenty years after she stepped out of Attack of the Clones. At around 30 dollars it's a friendly, honest little set, and if you want a Jedi starfighter on your shelf without spending big, this is the easy yes.

Best for: Star Wars fans who love a strong minifigure lineup on a small budget

The full review

What it is

There's a particular kind of LEGO® set that isn't trying to be the centerpiece of your shelf, it just wants to be a good little version of a thing you love, and that's exactly what this is. The Delta-7 Aethersprite is the narrow, arrow-shaped fighter Obi-Wan flies in Attack of the Clones, and LEGO has done it here in white and dark red with lime green engine accents and yellow round thrusters. It's small, roughly 26cm long, but it reads instantly as the right ship. The canopy pops open to a brick-built seat with a printed control panel, the landing gear retracts, and R4-P17's dome sits in a socket on the left wing the way it does in the film. It's the whole silhouette in miniature and it captures the feel.

The catch

Now for the honest bits, because there are a few. The wings are angled with Technic connectors and they hold firm, but you'll spot gaps along the joins if you turn it in the light, and the nose slope is a touch clunky where it meets the cockpit. The two stud shooters use the newer design that a lot of builders (me included) find a downgrade on the older ones. And there's a fairly big sticker sheet doing work that printed parts really could have handled, which always stings a little on a set at this price. None of it ruins the ship, but if you go in expecting a flawless model you'll notice the corners that got cut. It's a solid build, not a showpiece.

Who it's for

So here's how I'd call it. If you love a good minifigure lineup, this set is worth it for the figures almost on its own. Taun We is the first Kaminoan LEGO has ever produced, a proper piece of Star Wars history twenty years in the making, and the exclusive Obi-Wan is one of the nicer versions of him with printing that lines up cleanly from torso to legs. R4-P17 got fresh 2022 head and body prints too. If you want a Jedi starfighter on the shelf for around 30 dollars, or you're building out a clone-era collection, grab it happily. If you're chasing the most refined ship engineering LEGO can do, this isn't that set, and that's fine. It knows what it is. With a community rating sitting right around 4.0 out of 5 and this one leaving shelves in mid-2026, it's a friendly, uncomplicated yes for the right person.

The parts story

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

The build is quick and pleasant, the kind of afternoon-sized project you can finish in a sitting. You start with a small central core, then work outward layering the white and dark red plates that give the fighter its flat, blade-like profile. The angled wings go on using Technic axle connectors, which lock them at a firm angle, and then you drop in the little play features: the retractable landing gear, the stud shooters, and the internal storage that tucks R4's body away out of sight. The cockpit comes together near the end with its brick-built seat and printed control slope. It's not a technical brain-teaser, but the shaping is smarter than the piece count suggests.

On parts, the design leans on some of the newer wedge plates to get that sleek narrow nose, and those are genuinely useful in a parts drawer. The printed control panel slope is a nice touch, and the updated R4-P17 dome with 2022 head and body prints looks sharp from the front (the unprinted back is the one letdown). The real value here isn't rare elements though, it's the figures: two minifigures plus the astromech, headlined by Taun We with her tall Kaminoan neck and gentle printed face, a mold you can't get anywhere else. For a set hovering around 10 cents a piece with that lineup attached, the value maths land firmly in your favor.

Fun facts

  • 01Taun We in this set is the first Kaminoan minifigure LEGO has ever made, arriving in 2022, exactly twenty years after the species debuted in Attack of the Clones.
  • 02The real Delta-7 was painted red to signal the Jedi's diplomatic immunity, which is why Obi-Wan's fighter wears that dark red livery instead of a military scheme.
  • 03The Delta-7 has no built-in hyperdrive, so in the films it has to dock with a separate hyperspace transport ring to travel between systems.
  • 04Because the ship's wings are too thin for a full astromech, R4-P17 rides as a dome-only droid socketed into the wing, and LEGO recreated that exactly with just the head mounted on top.

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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