The Baratie Floating Restaurant
The biggest One Piece set yet, and honestly a proper centerpiece for any fan.
Set 75640 · 2025
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If you love One Piece, this one's an easy yes.
You get a big ship-shaped display piece with a fully accessible interior on the back and 10 minifigures covering the whole Baratie showdown. It's pricey and it's a long build, so it's really aimed at grown-up fans who want a display piece rather than a quick weekend project. But the value per part actually holds up well against other licensed sets, which is rare these days.
Best for: Adult One Piece fans who want a display centerpiece
What it is
The Baratie is the sea-going restaurant from the East Blue arc, run by peg-legged old chef Zeff, and it's where Luffy first tries to recruit Sanji. LEGO went big here: this is the largest One Piece LEGO® set to date, and it's built as a split model. One side gives you the detailed hull with that distinctive fish-head prow, and the back opens up into a fully accessible three-level interior. You get the kitchen, the dining room, Zeff's quarters, and the treasure room, so it's a display piece and a playset rolled into one. For anyone who watched the arc (in the manga, the anime, or the Netflix live-action), it nails the vibe of a floating oasis in the middle of the ocean.
The catch
Now the honest bits. This is a costly set, sitting around 299.99 to 329.99 at RRP, so it's a considered purchase rather than an impulse grab. It's also a long build, roughly six hours across 3 instruction booklets, 27 bags, and 840 steps, and a few sections get genuinely fiddly. The collectible wanted-poster tiles are randomized across the wider One Piece range, which a lot of builders grumbled about, because you can open your box and find duplicates instead of a complete set. And oddly for a set this size, the sticker sheets are small, so there are fewer printed nods and Easter eggs baked in than fans usually get from a big licensed model.
Who it's for
So who should grab it? If One Piece is your series and you want one showpiece that captures the Baratie showdown, this is the set to get. The minifigure lineup alone (Luffy, Zoro, Nami, Usopp, the exclusive Sanji, Zeff, Garp, Helmeppo, Koby, and Mihawk) tells the whole story, and Mihawk with his coffin ship is worth the shelf space on his own. If you're only a casual fan, or you want something quick and cheap, this isn't it, and one of the smaller One Piece sets or the Going Merry will scratch the itch for less. But for the target buyer, an adult fan after a real centerpiece, the value holds up and the build stays fun the whole way through. Easy recommendation.
The parts story
What the build is actually like, and the pieces worth knowing about.
The build is split up smartly so it never turns into a slog. You work through the hull and that brilliant fish-head prow, then move into the interior floor by floor, and the designers spread the minifigures out across the booklets to keep you motivated. There's some genuinely clever technique in here too, from the inventive staircase construction to the way the walls come together, and the fish head is the section everyone singles out as the highlight. At roughly six hours across 840 steps it's a proper long sit, and a couple of stretches get tricky, but it stays varied enough that it doesn't get repetitive.
On the parts front, the headline is really the minifigures rather than a pile of new molds. Mihawk is the standout, capturing both the anime and live-action look, and he comes with his oversized blade and a separate coffin-shaped boat. The kitchen-overalls Sanji is exclusive to this set, and over half the ten figures are unique to the Baratie. You also get 5 random collectible wanted-poster tiles as printed elements. Value-wise this is where it earns its keep: about 3,400 parts for the price lands better than the X-Mansion or Arkham Asylum, which give you fewer pieces at the same or higher cost, so the price-per-part story is a friendly one for a big licensed set.
Fun facts
- 01In the story the Baratie was founded by ex-pirate chef Zeff, who opened it with a young Sanji after the two nearly starved together on a barren rock.
- 02This is the largest LEGO One Piece set released so far, built as a split model with the ship's exterior on one face and a three-level open interior on the other.
- 03Mihawk arrives with his own coffin-shaped boat, a direct nod to how 'Hawk-Eyes' first sails into the arc to duel Zoro.
- 04The wanted-poster tiles are randomized across the wider One Piece range, so LEGO turned them into a chase-collectible rather than guaranteeing a full set in the box.
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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