The Enchanted Treehouse
Thirteen Disney minidolls in one box, which is the whole reason you're here.
Brick Rated Score
Set 43215 · 2023
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This is the set that made me realize how badly I wanted a full shelf of Disney minidolls without buying twelve separate boxes to get there.
You get Elsa, Anna, Moana, Mulan, Raya, Belle, Jasmine, Tiana, Pocahontas, Mirabel, Alice, Wendy, and Tinker Bell in one hit, which is the most figures LEGO had ever packed into a single set at the time. The treehouse itself is a gentle, breezy build, so don't come for engineering. Come for the lineup.
Best for: Disney minidoll collectors who want the whole princess roster in one box
What it is
The Enchanted Treehouse is one of those LEGO® sets where the box does most of the talking before you even open it. Thirteen Disney minidolls. That was the record for the most figures in any single set when this one landed in 2023, and honestly that number is the whole pitch. You get Moana, Mulan, Raya, Belle, Jasmine, Tiana, Pocahontas, Mirabel, Alice, Wendy, Tinker Bell, and the Frozen sisters Anna and Elsa, and if you've been picking these characters up one expensive polybag or small set at a time, seeing them all lined up together is a real moment. Elsa and Anna even come with fresh open-mouthed smiling faces, which is a small thing that made me grin more than it should have.
The catch
The treehouse itself is two structures joined by a zip line. The bigger one is three floors, with a bedroom and balcony up top and a secret door in the middle that swings open to reveal a spiral staircase. The smaller tree is really a play zone: a slide that runs down over a waterfall, and behind the water there's a hidden cave with a treasure chest and a map. It's charming, and the play value for a kid is genuinely high. I'll be straight with you though, this is an easy, quick build with no real head-scratchers. If you build for the engineering, you'll be done before you've settled into it.
Who it's for
The other honest part is price. At $159.99 you're paying mostly for the character roster, not the architecture, and once you clock that, the plain-ish treehouse can feel a bit thin. The counterargument, and it's a fair one, is that if LEGO sold these thirteen figures across separate sets you'd spend roughly double to collect them all. So the math actually works in your favor if the lineup is what you want. Grab it if you're a Disney minidoll collector or you're building a play world for a Disney-obsessed kid. Skip it if you want a demanding build or a serious display centerpiece. Since it's now retired, the price isn't going to get any friendlier, so if that roster is calling you, don't sit on it too long.
The parts story
What the build is actually like, and the pieces worth knowing about.
Building this is a relaxed afternoon rather than a project. You start on the larger three-story tree, work up through the floors to the balcony bedroom, and tuck in the swing-open secret door with its spiral staircase, which is the cleverest single moment in the box. Then you build the smaller tree with its waterfall slide and the little cave hidden behind the water. The techniques are all approachable, nothing that'll trip up a nine-year-old, and that's clearly the point. As an adult you're mostly enjoying the color palette and the figures rather than being tested, and that's a perfectly nice way to spend an evening even if it won't stretch you.
The parts are where this quietly rewards you. A bunch of elements show up in colors for the very first time here, especially the pale aqua pieces, plus transparent rocks and plants and leaves in medium lavender and bright light blue. The leaf elements are the same newer molds first seen in the Lord of the Rings Rivendell set, and the big 6x6 plates used for the roof panels are the ones LEGO debuted as icy ground in the Super Mario line, repurposed here. For parts collectors that's a genuinely useful haul of recolors. Set the 13 minidolls aside and 1,016 pieces for the price is only okay, but factor the figures back in and the value story flips, because assembling this roster any other way would cost you far more.
Fun facts
- 01With 13 minidolls, this held the record for the most figures LEGO had ever included in a single set at the time of its 2023 release.
- 02Elsa and Anna appear here with newly designed open-mouthed smiling faces, matching the cheerful expressions of the rest of the lineup.
- 03Many parts appear in brand new colors in this set, including pale aqua elements and transparent rocks and plants that had never been produced before.
- 04The 6x6 roof plates were first introduced in the LEGO Super Mario theme as icy terrain, and the leaf elements debuted in the Lord of the Rings Rivendell set.
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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