Super Heroes Marvel

Spider-Man vs. Oscorp

A brilliant minifigure lineup wrapped in a building that plays better than it displays.

Brick Rated Score

3.6 out of 53.6/5

Set 76324 · 2025

Pieces808
Minifigs8
Year2025
Set number76324

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The verdict

The eight minifigures are the whole reason I would reach for this one.

Getting an armoured Green Goblin, Kraven the Hunter, and an Eddie Brock with a Venom symbiote on his back in a single box is genuinely special, and the Oscorp facade with its swinging web strand is a lot of fun to play with. The trouble is the buildings themselves feel thin for a set that asks 140 dollars, with sparse interiors and a lobby that has a coffee cup and not much else. I would happily own it for the figures and the play features, as long as I go in knowing the architecture is the weak link.

Best for: Marvel collectors who care more about the character lineup than architectural detail

The full review

What it is

This is the first time Oscorp has ever shown up in LEGO form, and that alone made me sit up. The set builds a three part New York street scene: Miles Morales's apartment sitting above a jewelry store, the Oscorp building in the middle, and Venom's apartment perched over a convenience store. Assembled, it stands about 46 cm tall, so it has real presence on a shelf. The headline feature is a dial on the roof that swings a web strand back and forth across the front, plus a red Technic switch that pops open a rooftop trapdoor so you can hang Ghost-Spider from the ceiling exactly like the Spider-Verse films. As a play set it clicks, and the eight figures give you an instant villain-versus-hero showdown right out of the box.

The catch

Here is where I have to be straight with you. For 140 dollars, the buildings feel thin. Reviewers across Brickset and Jay's Brick Blog kept landing on the same word, juniorised, and once you see the interiors you understand why. The Oscorp lobby has a coffee cup on a countertop, a fire extinguisher, and precious little else. The first floor is a thin desk and not much more. The facade looks the part from a distance but there is not a lot of substance behind it, and the spider-heroes you get (Spider-Man, Ghost-Spider, Miles Morales) are all figures that have appeared before, some in cheaper sets that actually included dual-moulded legs. Paying a premium for reused figures without the nicer legwork is the kind of thing that quietly irritates you mid-build.

Who it's for

So who is this actually for? If you collect Marvel minifigures, the answer is easy. An armoured Green Goblin, a Kraven the Hunter who has not appeared since 2016, and a convincing Eddie Brock with a symbiote are worth a lot to the right person, and the play features make it a joy for a kid who wants to stage web-swinging battles. If you build for architecture and clever engineering, or you want every dollar to show up in the model itself, this one will leave you a little cold. I would buy it for the cast and the fun, go in clear-eyed about the sparse rooms, and not expect a display-piece building to rival the better modular-style Marvel sets.

The parts story

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

The build runs about two hours and is a gentle one, three modular structures that come together into a single street. It is not a technically demanding build, and that is part of the criticism: the interiors go up fast because there is not much to put in them. The most satisfying moments are the mechanisms, the roof dial that drives the swinging web and the Technic switch that opens the trapdoor, which are the bits that make it feel alive rather than static. If you enjoy a relaxed, playful build over an engineering puzzle, that pacing will suit you fine.

The figures are the real parts story. The armoured Green Goblin is the standout, with crisp printing across the head, torso, and legs, a purple Ninjago-style mask for the helmet, and a pumpkin bomb that now has a detachable flame piece and printing on both sides. None of Eddie Brock's elements are brand new, but they combine into a genuinely convincing figure with that protruding Venom symbiote on his back. Kraven brings his classic lion jacket and fur collar. The Part-Out-Value sits around 220 dollars against a 140 dollar RRP, so on a pure parts and figures basis the numbers work in your favour even if the buildings do not wow you.

Fun facts

  • 01This set marks the very first appearance of Oscorp in official LEGO form.
  • 02Kraven the Hunter had not appeared as a minifigure since 2016's 76057 Spider-Man: Web Warriors Ultimate Bridge Battle, a nine year gap.
  • 03A red Technic switch opens a trapdoor in the roof so you can pose Ghost-Spider hanging upside down, a nod to the Spider-Verse animated films.
  • 04BrickEconomy lists the set's Part-Out-Value at around 220 dollars, well above its 140 dollar retail price.

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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