Fortnite

Supply Drop

A crate full of chaos, built brick by brick.

Brick Rated Score

3.8 out of 53.8/5

Set 77080 · 2026

Pieces314
Minifigsn/a
Year2026
Set number77080

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The verdict

I love that LEGO picked the supply drop as the thing to build, because it is the one prop every Fortnite player has sprinted across an open field for, heart pounding, hoping nobody else got there first.

At 314 pieces this is a quick, satisfying build rather than a weekend project, and the crate itself, with its banner and blue glow accents, actually looks like it dropped out of the sky. I would not call it a showpiece for your shelf the way a bigger licensed set can be, but as a fast, fun, story-driven build for a Fortnite fan it does exactly what it promises. Get it for the player in your life who already has the game memorized, and maybe skip it if you are only after pure part count value.

Best for: Fortnite players who want a piece of the game they already love, more than serious part collectors

The full review

What it is

I will say this straight away, the supply drop is one of the smartest choices LEGO could have made for this theme. It is not a building or a vehicle, it is a moment, that specific rush of seeing a crate fall from the sky and racing everyone else to it. Turning that into a 314 piece set means you get a compact, focused build that captures the drama of the game without needing a huge footprint on a shelf, and honestly, that is exactly the kind of set I want more licensed themes to try instead of always reaching for the biggest possible build.

The catch

I do want to be honest about where this set sits though. Three hundred and fourteen pieces is not a lot, and if you are the kind of builder who measures a set by hours spent or by part count per dollar, this one will feel modest next to the bigger vehicle and location sets in the same line. It is also a very specific, narrow piece of the Fortnite world, so its appeal rises and falls almost entirely on how attached you are to the game itself rather than to LEGO building as a craft. If you are shopping for general part value, there are better options in this theme.

Who it's for

Get this one for the Fortnite fan who wants a fast, satisfying build that actually means something to them, a display piece that says something specific about the game rather than a generic vehicle. Skip it if you are chasing part count, complex building techniques, or you do not already have some affection for battle royale culture, because none of that context carries over on its own.

The parts story

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

Building this one moves quickly. It reads less like an engineering puzzle and more like assembling a prop, which fits, because that is exactly what a supply drop crate is in the game. You are not fighting tricky angles or hidden connections here, you are stacking up the crate structure, locking in the banner and paneling, and watching the recognizable shape come together fast enough that you will likely finish in one sitting rather than spreading it across a few evenings.

The pieces worth talking about are the ones that sell the fantasy, the printed or patterned elements that give the crate its game accurate banner and markings, plus the blue accent pieces that suggest the drop's glow as it falls. Those details matter more than raw part count here, since a set like this earns its keep by looking unmistakably like the thing it is representing rather than by packing in rare or oversized elements. For a smaller set, that specificity is the whole point.

Fun facts

  • 01The supply drop is one of Fortnite's most recognizable mechanics, a glowing crate that parachutes down carrying high tier loot and often triggers a mad scramble between players when it lands.
  • 02LEGO's Fortnite theme launched as one of the first major licensed collaborations built around a live service video game rather than a film or television property.
  • 03Choosing a genuinely narrow, moment specific build like a supply drop, instead of a full vehicle or location, is a relatively unusual choice for a licensed LEGO set and signals how confident the theme is in its own iconography.

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