Pizza Delivery Experience with Vehicles
A pizza joint that flings dinner across the room, and somehow it works.
Brick Rated Score
Set 60496 · 2026
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This is one of the goofiest City sets I have picked up in ages, and I mean that as a compliment.
It is a little pizza restaurant crossed with a game-show contraption: you turn a dial to watch flames flicker in the wood-fired oven, then yank a lever and the delivery car actually launches a pizza off its hood. The concept is bananas and the execution is charming, which is exactly the kind of set that wins me over. It is best for a kid who lives for restaurant play and does not mind that realism went out the window.
Best for: kids six and up who love food-and-vehicle role play
What it is
The Pizza Delivery Experience with Vehicles is exactly what it sounds like and then a little bit more unhinged. You get a compact toy restaurant with a food-prep counter and a dining area, a wood-fired oven where a turn of the dial makes the flames flicker as pizzas slide in, and a flame-emblazoned sports car that shoots a pizza right off its hood when you pull the lever. Add a green delivery scooter and a drone with its own landing pad and you have a whole tiny food economy on one baseplate. The first time I flicked the oven dial and watched the fire dance, I grinned like a kid, and that is the whole point of a set like this.
The catch
I will be straight with you about the value, because this is where City sets always earn scrutiny. Around 494 pieces for a fifty-dollar restaurant is not generous on paper, and a good chunk of the parts go into the play functions and the little accessories rather than a big satisfying structure. The launching car is a hoot the first ten times, but it is a novelty mechanism, and the flung pizza is the kind of small element that vanishes under the couch by week two. If you are shopping purely on brick-for-your-buck math, this one asks you to pay a little extra for the personality. My honest advice is to wait for it to dip on sale, because it absolutely will, and at a discount the charm-to-price ratio flips in your favor.
Who it's for
Who should grab it: a kid six and up who narrates their own restaurant dramas, loves vehicles, and thinks a car that catapults pizza is the funniest thing they have ever heard. It is a fantastic imaginative-play set and the accessory count keeps small hands busy for hours. Who should skip it: an adult collector chasing a display-worthy build or a realistic City streetscape. This is not that, and it never pretends to be. If you want clever engineering and grounded detail, look elsewhere in the City lineup. If you want joy and a bit of chaos, it delivers.
The parts story
What the build is actually like, and the pieces worth knowing about.
Building this is quick and bouncy rather than meditative. It is aimed squarely at younger builders, so the structure comes together fast and most of the effort goes into the moving bits: the geared flame dial in the oven, the spring-loaded launch mechanism tucked into the car, and the little swing-out sections of the restaurant. There are some genuinely clever small techniques hiding in the functions, which is what Brick Fanatics singled out too, and even as an experienced builder I enjoyed seeing how the pizza-flinging lever was engineered into such a compact body.
The standout parts here are the printed and specialized pieces rather than rare recolors. You get printed pizza tiles, a retro arcade-machine element, delivery-box pieces, a cash register, and the drone with its landing pad, all of which are lovely additions to a City parts bin. The flame pieces used in the oven and the flame-print car panels are the visual signature of the set. It is not a set you buy for a groundbreaking new mold, but the accessory haul is where the real value sits, and a City fan will find plenty here worth scavenging for their own builds.
Fun facts
- 01The delivery car does not just carry pizza, it launches one off its hood when you pull a lever, one of the sillier play functions LEGO has put in a City set.
- 02The set includes a child minifigure with a cochlear implant, part of LEGO's ongoing push for more representation across its figures.
- 03Reviewers described it as an unusual, almost game-show-style build concept, unlike the more grounded restaurants and shops that usually populate the City theme.
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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