Spider-Man Hero Figure
A three-foot-tall wall-crawler with a thousand joints and a wobbly sense of balance.
Brick Rated Score
Set 76346 · 2026
Affiliate link. We may earn a commission at no extra cost to you.As an Amazon Associate we earn from qualifying purchases.
This is the biggest, bendiest brick-built Spider-Man LEGO has made yet, and standing him next to my shelf he honestly looks incredible, all 36 centimeters of him with fingers that curl one knuckle at a time.
The trouble is that all those joints come with a catch: getting him to actually hold a dramatic pose without a foot slipping or an arm popping loose tested my patience more than once. At around $100 he asks a lot for what is really a display piece that fights you a little. If you love the character and want a poseable centerpiece, he earns his spot, but go in knowing the posing is fiddly.
Best for: Marvel fans who want a big poseable Spidey to display and don't mind coaxing him into balance
What it is
The first time I got this Spider-Man standing on my desk I actually laughed, because he looms. Over 36 centimeters of brick-built wall-crawler in the Brand New Day suit, with 24 points of articulation and fingers you can curl one joint at a time. That last detail is what got me, the hands are ridiculous in the best way, and posing him mid-web-shot with the detachable webbing feels like holding a proper action figure rather than a model. LEGO has been building these buildable heroes for a few years now, and this is the tallest and most jointed one they have attempted. On presence alone he delivers.
The catch
Here is where I have to be straight with you. All that articulation comes at a cost, and the cost is stability. He is a beautiful nightmare to balance. Reviewers across the board found the same thing I did: coax him into one of those dynamic crouching poses from the box art and a foot slides, or a shoulder pops, or he simply tips over and you start again. He is heavy and top-loaded, and the joints that give him movement also give him a will of his own. Add in that the suit detailing leans on stickers rather than printing, and that these buildable Spideys have shot up in price over the past few years without the part count really following, and the roughly $100 asking price starts to feel steep for what is essentially a display figure that argues with you.
Who it's for
So who is he for? If you love Spider-Man and you want a big, characterful centerpiece for a shelf, and you are happy to find one solid stance and leave him there, he is a joy to look at and a satisfying evening of building. If you are buying him mainly to swoosh and re-pose constantly, or you flinch at stickers on a premium set, or you want engineering that feels rock-solid, I would think twice. He is a set you display and admire more than one you fiddle with daily.
The parts story
What the build is actually like, and the pieces worth knowing about.
Building him is genuinely fun in the way constructing a skeleton is fun, you work outward from a jointed core and watch a recognizable silhouette appear limb by limb. The articulation system is the star of the assembly, ball joints and hinges stacked so that by the end you have shoulders, elbows, wrists, a waist, hips, knees, ankles and those absurd finger joints all moving independently. It is aimed at ages 12 and up and that feels right, some of the joint sub-builds are fiddly and the payoff is in the finished poseability rather than any single clever moment.
There is not a headline new mold here that parts collectors will chase, this is more a study in red and blue in every element shape LEGO makes, curved slopes and panels shaping the muscle. The suit's finer web-lines and eye detailing come mostly from stickers, which is the recurring gripe, printed parts would have lifted it. You do get a full Spider-Man minifigure with its own webbing and a printed LEGO Marvel nameplate tile for the base, a nice touch that gives the little figure a proper display perch alongside his giant self.
Fun facts
- 01The figure is based on Spider-Man's suit from the 2026 movie Spider-Man: Brand New Day, and stands over 36cm (14.5 inches) tall.
- 02It packs 24 points of articulation, including fingers that move individually, one of the most jointed brick-built figures LEGO has released.
- 03Across the buildable Spider-Man figures, the price has climbed sharply, roughly quadrupling between the earlier 76226 Spider-Man Figure and this 76346 at $99.99.
- 04The set includes a bonus Spider-Man minifigure mounted on its own webbed display stand with a printed LEGO Marvel nameplate.
What other builders say
This write-up is grounded in real reviews and builder discussion, not just one opinion. A few worth reading:
More reviews
All reviews
World Map
The biggest LEGO set ever made, and yes, it's really one enormous mosaic.

Eiffel Tower
The tallest LEGO set ever, and it makes you earn every centimetre.

Titanic
The longest LEGO set ever made, and one of the most rewarding builds I've done.