Stitch & Scrump
The little blue menace gets a plushie sidekick, and honestly it works.
Brick Rated Score
Set 43296 · 2026
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This is a brick-built Stitch you actually want on a shelf, poseable ears and all, and this time he comes with Scrump, Lilo's raggedy handmade doll.
I have a soft spot for the fact that Scrump is done in a plush-toy style rather than a stiff little figure. It is a display piece first and a toy second, and at seventy dollars it asks a bit more than the earlier Stitch did. If you love the film or you build character sets for the personality, you will be happy. If you want mechanisms and clever function, this is not that kind of build.
Best for: Lilo & Stitch fans who want a poseable Stitch and his doll on a shelf
What it is
Stitch has been one of LEGO's better character builds since the 2024 buildable figure, and this 2026 version leans into what made that one work while giving him company. You get a larger poseable Stitch and a smaller Scrump, the raggedy doll Lilo stitches together herself in the film, built in a soft toy style rather than as a rigid little statue. The first time I saw the finished pair I actually grinned, because Scrump's lopsided button eyes and patchwork look are the kind of detail that could have been skipped and instead got done properly. Stitch himself has that round-bellied slouch just right, and the ears, arms, hands and head all move, so he does not have to stand there stiff. Add the ukulele into his hands and the grass skirt around his waist and you have got the hula scene in brick form.
The catch
I will be straight with you about the value, because it is the thing most people will weigh. Seventy dollars for 713 pieces works out to roughly ten cents a part, and the 2024 Stitch gave you a few more bricks for sixty. You are paying a premium for the license and for the second character, and whether that feels fair depends on how much you want Scrump specifically. The build itself is a two hour, ages nine and up affair that is comfortable rather than taxing. There are no gearboxes, no surprises in the technique, and once he is posed he mostly stays posed. If you go into character builds expecting engineering, the honest word is that this is sculpture, not machinery.
Who it's for
So who should pick this up. If you love Lilo & Stitch, if you build these figures for the likeness and the personality, or if you already have the older Stitch and want the doll to complete the pair, this is an easy yes and it will look great on a nightstand or bookshelf. Younger builders get a satisfying afternoon with the Build Together app mode if they want to split the work with someone. The people I would steer away are the function-first builders and anyone who owns the 2024 Stitch and is not fussed about Scrump, because you will feel the overlap. For everyone charmed by that little blue troublemaker, though, this one earns its shelf space.
The parts story
What the build is actually like, and the pieces worth knowing about.
Building this is a calm, shape-focused couple of hours rather than a technical workout. You are stacking and layering to sculpt curves, the round belly, the wide head, those signature ears, so a lot of the work is about getting smooth contours out of small pieces and clever angles. It is the sort of build that rewards patience over problem solving, and it stays approachable enough for the stated nine-and-up age without feeling babyish for an adult builder. Scrump comes together quickly at the end and gives you a nice little palate cleanser after the bigger figure.
The interesting parts here are the ones doing the shaping work. Expect a healthy pile of curved slopes, rounded plates and small joint elements that give Stitch his poseable arms, hands, ears and head, and the ukulele and grass skirt are the standout accessory pieces that tie him to the film. Scrump leans on printed and specially placed elements to land those mismatched button eyes and patchwork face. There are no headline new molds that reviewers flagged, so the value story is really about the finished likeness rather than a parts-pack windfall. If you part sets out for bricks, this is not the one, but if you judge parts by what they build, the sculpting here is the point.
Fun facts
- 01Scrump is the doll Lilo makes herself in the film, complete with mismatched button eyes, and LEGO chose to render her in a soft plushie style rather than as a rigid figure.
- 02The ukulele accessory is a nod to Stitch's love of Hawaiian music and the Elvis obsession that runs through the movie.
- 03This is the second buildable Stitch from LEGO, following the well-liked 2024 set 43249, but the first to pair him with Scrump.
- 04The set launched on June 1, 2026 at $69.99 / £59.99 / €69.99 and includes a Build Together mode in the LEGO Builder app for team building.
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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