Quality Quidditch Supplies & Ice Cream Parlour
Two of the friendliest Diagon Alley shopfronts LEGO has done in years.
Brick Rated Score
Set 76452 · 2025
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This is one of those sets that quietly wins you over.
Two shops, six minifigures, and a broom shop with a floating broomstick that made me grin the first time it worked. It is not the grand centerpiece of Diagon Alley, but as a modular block you can snap onto the rest of the street, it pulls its weight. If you already own the other 2025 Diagon Alley shops, this one is close to an easy yes.
Best for: Harry Potter fans building out a modular Diagon Alley street
What it is
The Quality Quidditch Supplies side is what got me first. There is a little floating broomstick function inside the shop, and when I set the broom hovering behind the counter it landed exactly the fussy, magical note this theme is supposed to hit. The shop is stuffed with the kind of details a Potter fan lingers over, a Slytherin uniform, a Quaffle, a Bludger, the Golden Snitch, tiny trophies. Next to it sits Florean Fortescue's ice cream parlour, which opens up on a hinge for play and gives you seating inside and out, plus a sweet retro ice cream stand parked in the street. Six minifigures come in the box: Florean Fortescue, Katie Bell, Alicia Spinnet, Ron Weasley, Cho Chang, and a Quidditch shopkeeper. Two of those, Katie Bell and Alicia Spinnet, are appearing as physical minifigures for the very first time, which is a real treat if you follow the Quidditch corner of the fandom.
The catch
I will be honest about the value question, because it matters here. At an RRP of 99 dollars for 795 pieces, this lands on the pricier end per brick for the Harry Potter theme, and you feel it a little when you open the boxes and see how compact the two builds really are. These are facades more than deep dollhouses. The interiors are pleasant but shallow, so if you were picturing rooms you can rearrange and fill, temper that. The ice cream parlour in particular comes out smaller and plainer than the Quidditch shop, and once both are built side by side the sweet shop is clearly the quieter of the two. None of this makes it a bad set, but it does mean the license and the minifigures are carrying a good chunk of the sticker price.
Who it's for
So who should bring this home. If you are already collecting the 2025 Diagon Alley shops and you want that street to keep growing, this is a near automatic pick, because the modular connection to 76439 Ollivanders and Madam Malkin's and the rest of the row is the whole point and it works beautifully. Younger builders around the 8 to 10 range will love the play functions and the easy separate instruction booklets that let siblings build in parallel. The people I would steer away are collectors chasing raw part value or a big architectural showpiece, because this is a modest two shop set, not a landmark. Buy it for the street and the minifigures, and you will be happy.
The parts story
What the build is actually like, and the pieces worth knowing about.
The build itself is relaxed and quick, the kind you can knock out in an easygoing evening. LEGO splits it into separate instruction booklets, one per shop, so two people can build at the same time without fighting over a single book, and it genuinely makes this a nice shared sit down. Neither shop is technically demanding, so it stays firmly in the pleasant, low stress category rather than the puzzle box category. The Quidditch side has more going on with its floating broomstick mechanism and its wall of gear, while the ice cream parlour goes together fast and leaves you a little wanting.
The real story is in the accessories and the printing rather than any headline new mold. You get a lovely spread of printed Quidditch elements, the Quaffle, Bludger, and Golden Snitch, plus trophies, a Slytherin uniform, and the fiddly little bits that dress the broom shop. The ice cream stand brings its own printed sweet details. The minifigures are where the parts value concentrates: Katie Bell and Alicia Spinnet debut here in physical form, and Florean Fortescue rounds out a cast that is hard to source elsewhere. If you are a parts and figure person, that exclusivity is the strongest argument in the box.
Fun facts
- 01This set marks the first time Katie Bell and Alicia Spinnet, two of the Gryffindor Chasers, have ever appeared as physical LEGO minifigures.
- 02Both shops are designed as modular units that clip onto 76439 Ollivanders & Madam Malkin's Robes and the other 2025 Diagon Alley sets to form one continuous brick-built street.
- 03Florean Fortescue's Ice Cream Parlour is a real Diagon Alley location from the books, where Harry spends part of his summer before third year doing homework over free sundaes.
- 04The Quidditch shop includes a floating broomstick play function, a small hidden mechanism that displays a broom hovering as if held aloft by magic.
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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