Ravager Jumpsuit Groot
The cheekiest Groot LEGO has made, red jumpsuit, detonator and all.
Brick Rated Score
Set 76341 · 2026
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This is baby Groot in his little red Ravager jumpsuit, standing about ten inches tall with a detonator he absolutely should not be holding.
It captures that Guardians Vol. 2 mischief perfectly, and of the three Groot figures LEGO has done, this is the one that made me grin the most. The finish is not flawless (the joints show, the outfit leans on stickers), so it lands as a very good display piece rather than a perfect one. If you love the Guardians, he belongs on your shelf.
Best for: Guardians of the Galaxy fans who want a characterful shelf figure with personality
What it is
I did not expect a small tree in a red jumpsuit to have this much charm, and yet here we are. This is baby Groot from Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2, wearing his Ravager outfit and clutching the detonator he is far too small and far too gleeful to be trusted with. He stands over ten inches tall, which is bigger than the character has any right to be, and that scale is part of the joke. The thing that got me is the face. It has that fixed, faintly guilty expression, and because the eyebrows actually move you can nudge him from innocent to plotting in a second. It is the kind of figure you keep turning around on the shelf.
The catch
I will be straight with you about where it falls short, because it does. For a set that costs around sixty dollars, 604 pieces is not a generous count, and a chunk of those bricks vanish into building the detonator rather than the star of the show. The jumpsuit leans on stickers to carry the detail, which is a shame on a display piece you will look at closely, even though the black zipper is properly pad printed. And the articulation, lovely as it is for posing, means you can see the joints. The grey hips and dark brown ankles have obvious connection points, and because his feet are deliberately wide for stability you sometimes have to hunt for the balance spot before he will hold a dramatic pose.
Who it's for
So who is this for. If you are a Guardians fan, or you already have the other Groot figures and want the set completed, this is an easy yes, and reviewers tend to agree it is the most successful of the Groot variants. It is also a genuinely fun build for a display shelf rather than a playset. If you came looking for value per brick, or you want a flawless finish with no visible joints and no stickers, this will nag at you, and you might want to wait for a discount. Groot himself, though, is hard to say no to.
The parts story
What the build is actually like, and the pieces worth knowing about.
The build follows the now familiar LEGO articulated figure formula, so if you have put together one of the bigger buildable characters before, this will feel comfortable rather than surprising. Limbs connect to the torso with ball joints, the fingers and neck are jointed, and a good part of the fun is in the finishing touches that give the face its personality. It is not a long or taxing build, and it uses the LEGO Builder app for zoom and 3D rotation if you want it. The detonator is a nice self contained little sub build with its buttons and levers, a proper prop rather than an afterthought.
The interest here is in the shaping rather than a haul of rare new molds. Getting a bark textured tree body and a red jumpsuit both to read clearly in brick and joint form is the real trick, and the mix of browns doing the woody skin is what sells him. There is pad printing on the figure, including that black zipper, and the makers have clearly worked on the density of the white ink, which is heading in the right direction even if it is not perfect yet. The trade off for all that posability is honest: you get expressive joints, but you also see them, and no amount of clever parts use fully hides that.
Fun facts
- 01The set recreates the opening scene of Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2, where baby Groot dances while a battle rages behind him and is handed a detonator, which is exactly the accessory included here.
- 02It released on January 1, 2026 with a recommended price of 59.99 dollars (54.99 pounds, 59.99 euros) and is aimed at builders aged 10 and up.
- 03Despite being a baby Groot, the finished figure stands over 10 inches (25 cm) tall, a playful nod to the character being anything but small in spirit.
- 04Reviewers consider this the most iconic and most successful of LEGO's three Groot figure variants, though the character's stylised look remains divisive among fans.
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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