Ocarina of Time, The Final Battle
Ganondorf finally becomes a minifigure, and the whole set is built around him.
Brick Rated Score
Set 77093 · 2026
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This one is really about the people in the box.
You get Link, a lovely new pink-dress Zelda, and the first ever Ganondorf minifigure, and all three are as good as LEGO minifigures get. The beast Ganon build and the crumbling castle are fun, if a little small for the money. If you played Ocarina of Time as a kid, this hits square in the chest.
Best for: Ocarina of Time fans who care most about getting a definitive Ganondorf minifigure
Some sets are about the location, and some are about the characters. This LEGO® set is firmly the second kind. It recreates the final showdown from The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time, the 1998 game a lot of people still call the best Zelda ever made, and it does it with three minifigures, a big brick-built beast, and a chunk of Ganon's ruined castle. The headline is Ganondorf. After years of Link and Zelda showing up in the theme, the big villain of the whole series finally gets his own minifigure here, and he did not come to play. He has a brand new dual-moulded headpiece with a printed jewel, that unmistakable sallow Gerudo skin tone, and a fabric cape. People who follow this stuff closely are already floating him as the best minifigure of 2026, and once you see him in person it is hard to argue.
The rest of the trio backs him up nicely. Link is a familiar face from earlier sets, with triple-moulded hair, dual-moulded arms and legs, and his Master Sword and Hylian Shield. Zelda is new, wearing her pink dress with the Wingcrest and little Triforce motifs printed across it and her jewellery. The one small letdown is that her lovely dress is only printed on the front, so the back is plain, which is a shame on a fig this pretty. The set also gives you a translucent build standing in for the fairy Navi, which is a sweet touch, and a big brick-built Ganon, the boar-like beast form, towering over everyone with two golden swords.
Now the money. At around 130 dollars for 1,003 pieces, this is not the cheapest brick-for-brick you will find, and the castle itself is more of a diorama backdrop than a giant playset. But context matters. The previous Zelda set, the Great Deku Tree, ran about 300 dollars, so this lands as the far more accessible way into the theme, and that alone will win a lot of people over. If you grew up on Ocarina of Time, or you just want the definitive Ganondorf and a proper Link-and-Zelda pairing, this is an easy yes. If you are strictly chasing piece-count value or a big architectural build, you might feel the size. For everyone whose heart lives in Hyrule though, this one is going straight to the shelf, and honestly it earns the spot.
It builds quick and it builds happy. You can knock the whole thing out in an afternoon, and the pacing keeps you moving.
The parts story
What the build is actually like, and the pieces worth knowing about.
The build runs in a clean, linear order that makes for a relaxed afternoon. You start with the base and the crumbling castle ruins, work up the tower, and finish with the Ganon beast, which is the most interesting stretch by far. Building Ganon blends LEGO mech technique with creature shaping, so you are doing angled greebling and posable joints rather than stacking bricks, and it stays engaging the whole way. There is a fun play feature baked in too, a trans-yellow pressure plate that pops Ganondorf up out of the rubble, plus rubble sections hiding three Recovery Hearts.
For parts, the standouts are the two large golden swords made just for this set as Ganon's weapons, and they are the kind of piece parts fans will want spares of. Beyond that, the real value here is in the printing rather than the plastic count. There are zero stickers in the whole box, so Ganondorf's jewel, Zelda's Royal Crest dress, the Triforce motifs, and Ganon's printed pyramid face tiles are all crisp printed elements. You also get the Master Sword, the Megaton Hammer, the Hylian Shield, and two fabric capes. At 1,003 pieces the raw count is modest for the price, so think of this less as a bulk parts haul and more as a set you buy for three superb minifigures and a genuinely fun beast build.
Fun facts
- 01Ganondorf finally becomes an official minifigure here, his very first, despite Link and Zelda having appeared in LEGO sets before him.
- 02The set recreates a specific game moment: Ganon knocks the Master Sword out of Link's hand, and only the Master Sword can land the finishing blow, which is why disarming Link is built right into the play features.
- 03Ocarina of Time launched in 1998 and is still regularly ranked among the greatest video games ever made, which is part of why this final-battle set carries so much weight for fans.
- 04There are no stickers anywhere in the box, every decoration including the transparent stand-in for the fairy Navi is done with printed elements.
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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