Super Heroes Marvel

Spider-Man's Mask

A wall trophy that nails the face and fumbles a few of the details.

Brick Rated Score

3.8 out of 53.8/5

Set 76285 · 2024

Pieces487
Minifigsn/a
Year2024
Set number76285

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The verdict

I built this one expecting a novelty and came away actually impressed with how well the eyes turned out.

The ball joint construction behind those white lenses lets you angle them into that classic narrowed Spidey squint, and that alone sold me on the design. Where it loses me a little is the price. At seventy dollars for 487 pieces, I want every panel printed, not half printed and half sticker, and up close you can spot the seams where the web pattern doesn't quite connect. Get it for a Spider-Man fan with wall space and a sale price in mind, and skip it if mismatched panel lines are going to bother you every time you walk past it.

Best for: Spider-Man collectors who want a display piece and can catch it on a discount

The full review

What it is

I'll be honest, I didn't think a helmet-shaped display piece could hold my attention for an hour and a half, but the way this one goes together changed my mind. Each section of the face, the brow, the cheeks, the chin, builds as its own little sub-assembly and clicks into the main shell with real solidity. The part that got me was the eyes. LEGO used ball joints tucked behind the white lenses so you can actually tilt them into that narrow, alert Spider-Man squint instead of leaving them as flat static shapes. Stood back a few feet, the web pattern reads perfectly and it is instantly, unmistakably Spider-Man.

The catch

Where I have to be straight with you is the price. Seventy dollars for 487 pieces works out to about fourteen cents a piece, and a chunk of that count is basic brackets and slopes doing structural work you'll never see. The bigger issue is that LEGO mixed pre-printed webbing pieces with plain stickered ones on the same face, and up close the cheek panels don't quite meet the mouth, leaving small gaps that a fully printed set probably wouldn't have. It looks great from across the room and noticeably less great from six inches away.

Who it's for

If you love Spider-Man and have shelf or wall space you want to fill, this is a satisfying weekend build with a genuinely clever eye mechanism, especially if you catch it discounted. If you're the kind of builder who can't unsee a misaligned sticker seam, or you want your seventy dollars to buy flawless printing throughout, I'd wait for a sale or look at one of LEGO's other Marvel helmets instead.

The parts story

What the build is actually like, and the pieces worth knowing about.

Building this one feels less like assembling a display piece and more like sculpting a face out of studs-on-the-side bricks and SNOT brackets. Each facial zone, the brow ridge, the cheeks, the chin, comes together as its own compact sub-build before you click it onto the main head shape, so you get a string of small satisfying completions rather than one long slog. The trickiest and most rewarding part is the eyes, where sloped and modified bricks form curved apertures that the white lens pieces sit inside on ball joints, letting you dial in the exact tilt of Spidey's iconic squint.

The standout elements here are the printed webbing panels used across the mask's face, which do a lot of the visual heavy lifting, though they're paired with a few stickered pieces covering the same pattern, and that mix is the set's biggest sticking point for collectors who expected uniform printing at this price. The ball-jointed eye pieces are the genuine design win, giving a static display model an unexpected bit of posability. At 487 pieces for roughly seventy dollars, the part-count value sits on the pricier side of LEGO's wall art lineup, something Brickset and other reviewers flagged directly in their coverage.

Fun facts

  • 01The set was designed by LEGO designer Bjarke Lykke Madsen and released in December 2023 as part of the Marvel Super Heroes helmet display lineup.
  • 02The finished mask stands over 7.5 inches (19 cm) tall on its display stand, which includes a nameplate.
  • 0376285 officially retired in December 2025 after a shelf life of just over two years, and its secondary market value has climbed as high as ninety dollars for sealed sets according to BrickEconomy.
  • 04It shares its display format with LEGO's other superhero mask sets, including the later Miles Morales Mask (76329), sitting on the same style of black stand.

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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