Raptor & Titanosaurus Tracking Mission
The biggest LEGO dinosaur yet, sold at a price that will make you wince.
Brick Rated Score
Set 76973 · 2025
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The Titanosaurus is the single largest dinosaur figure LEGO has ever produced, and when you sit it next to a normal minifig the scale genuinely made me laugh out loud.
The build itself is quick and the little abandoned gas station is more charming than it has any right to be, but 109 dollars for 582 pieces is a lot to swallow. If a giant dino centerpiece is the whole point for you, you will be thrilled. If you count value per brick, this one stings.
Best for: dinosaur-mad kids and display collectors who want the biggest sauropod on the shelf
What it is
This is one of those sets where the box does most of the talking, and honestly it earns the bragging rights. The Titanosaurus that comes out of it is the biggest dinosaur figure LEGO has ever made, a long-necked sauropod with a movable neck, head and tail and a whip-like tail tip that trails out behind it. The first time I stood a minifig next to it I actually grinned, because the scale is properly silly in the best way. Alongside the big fella you get a Velociraptor with a snapping jaw, two vehicles, three minifigs, a spindly little campsite and an abandoned convenience store called the Stego Stop 'n' Go, which is far more fun than a side build has any business being.
The catch
Now for the part that will decide it for most people: the price. At 109 dollars for 582 pieces, this lands at roughly 0.19 dollars per brick, and that is steep even by Jurassic World standards. The reason is no secret. Those two enormous specialized dino molds eat up most of the budget, which leaves the actual brick-built content feeling a little slim once you have snapped the animals out of their bags. It is worth knowing too that the Titanosaurus body and neck are the same tooling as the 2023 Brachiosaurus, dressed in new dark grey with white printing. The genuinely new parts are the head mold and the long printed tail, so if you already own that Brachiosaurus you are paying premium money for a partial refresh.
Who it's for
So who should get this. Dinosaur-obsessed kids are the obvious and correct answer, because as a playset it delivers exactly what a seven-year-old wants: a giant beast to stomp around, a raptor to chase people with, and a gas station to wreck. Display-minded collectors who simply want the largest sauropod LEGO sells will also be happy to park it on a shelf and let it tower over everything. The people I would steer away are value hunters and anyone who already has the Brachiosaurus, because you will feel the thin part count and the recycled body keenly. Go in for the dino, not the deal, and you will love it.
The parts story
What the build is actually like, and the pieces worth knowing about.
The actual building here is fast and gentle, which makes sense for a set aimed at ages seven and up. The two dinosaurs arrive as pre-molded figures rather than brick builds, so the assembly you do is the vehicles, the campsite and the little gas station, and none of it will tax an experienced builder. What surprised me is how much personality the designers wrung out of just seventy-odd extra pieces beyond the figures. The Stego Stop 'n' Go is an economical scene but a genuinely cute one, and it gives the raptor somewhere to prowl.
The headline parts are the dino molds. The Titanosaurus head is a brand new mold, and the long tail is new too, printed and tipped with a softer flexible material so the thin end does not snap off in play. That white body printing across the dark grey neck and tail is crisp, with a small orange sack detail on the nose. The Velociraptor is also a fresh mold with a working jaw, though it turns up in a smaller cheaper set as well, so it is not exclusive to this one. If you are buying purely for elements, the value math is hard to defend, but as pure display-scale animal molds these are impressive pieces of tooling.
Fun facts
- 01The Titanosaurus is the largest dinosaur figure LEGO has ever produced, edging out the 2023 Brachiosaurus for sheer length thanks to its new elongated tail.
- 02The tail tip is molded in a softer, more flexible material specifically so the slim end will not break during play.
- 03The set's convenience store side build is officially named the Stego Stop 'n' Go, a refueling station and shop.
- 04The three minifigs are Zora Bennett, Henry Loomis and Martin Krebs, characters from the 2025 film Jurassic World Rebirth.
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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