Speed Champions

The Fast and The Furious Toyota Supra MK4

That orange paint job alone had me grinning before I even opened the box.

Brick Rated Score

4.1 out of 54.1/5

Set 77260 · 2026

Pieces292
Minifigsn/a
Year2026
Set number77260

Affiliate link. We may earn a commission at no extra cost to you.As an Amazon Associate we earn from qualifying purchases.

The verdict

I grew up rewatching the original Fast and the Furious more times than I want to admit, so seeing that hero orange Supra shrunk down into a Speed Champions build genuinely got me.

It builds fast, it looks fast standing still, and the proportions on the rear wing and hood scoop nail the movie car in a way a lot of licensed sets do not manage. I will be honest though, at 292 pieces this is a quick weeknight build, not a weekend project, so go in knowing you are paying for the license and the nostalgia as much as the piece count. If you love the film or you collect Speed Champions cars, this earns a spot on the shelf. If you want hours of build time for your money, look elsewhere in the range first.

Best for: Fast and Furious fans and Speed Champions collectors who want the hero car on the shelf, not a weekend-long build

The full review

What it is

I will admit my bias up front. The 1994 Toyota Supra MK4 that Brian O'Conner drove in the first Fast and the Furious movie is one of the most recognizable cars in tuner culture, and LEGO leaning into that orange paint job with the black racing stripe and that huge rear wing is exactly the kind of licensed tie-in that gets a reaction out of me before I have even snapped the last piece into place. The Speed Champions scale keeps the proportions tight and cartoonish in the fun way this theme always nails, so the wide stance and low hood line read as unmistakably Supra from across the room.

The catch

Here is the honest part. This is a 292 piece set, which puts it toward the smaller end of the Speed Champions car lineup, and licensed sets in this theme have a habit of carrying a price premium over the piece count alone. That is not a dealbreaker if you are buying this for the design and the nostalgia, but if you are the kind of builder who counts cost per piece before checkout, this one will not win on spreadsheet math. The build itself is also quick and straightforward, which is great for a first-time builder or a rainy afternoon with a kid, but it will not scratch the itch if you want a long, engaging session with your hands full of bricks.

Who it's for

I would put this in the cart for anyone who has a soft spot for the original film, wants a Speed Champions car with real personality on the shelf, or is building out a display of movie and TV cars alongside the rest of the range. I would skip it if you are chasing maximum pieces per dollar, or if a loud orange racing livery just is not your style next to the rest of your collection.

The parts story

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

Building this one moves fast, which fits the theme. You start with the chassis and drivetrain details underneath, then layer the body panels on top, and the shape of that MK4 Supra comes together within the first stretch of steps rather than slowly reveal itself late in the build the way some larger sets do. There is no long stretch of repetitive plate-stacking here, it is mostly straight assembly with a light rhythm of variety, which makes it a comfortable build for someone newer to the hobby or short on time.

The standout piece is the color story more than any single new mold, the specific orange used across the body panels is what sells the whole set, paired with the black stripe graphics and the oversized rear wing piece that is proportionally larger than you would expect on a car this size, exactly like the film car. At 292 pieces you are not getting a huge parts haul, so the value here leans on that recognizable silhouette and paint scheme rather than piece count or rare printed elements.

Fun facts

  • 01The real 1994 Toyota Supra MK4 driven by Paul Walker's character Brian O'Conner in the original 2001 Fast and the Furious became one of the most iconic cars in car culture, largely because of that bright orange paint and enormous rear wing.
  • 02This set continues LEGO's pattern of revisiting the Supra body style in Speed Champions, following earlier Toyota GR Supra sets in the same theme, which means fans can compare a stock modern Supra build against this movie hero version side by side.
  • 03Speed Champions cars are intentionally built in a slightly compressed scale so that wheels, engines, and cabins all look proportionally right sitting next to other cars in the range, rather than being a strict 1 to 1 scale model.
  • 04Licensed movie car sets in the Speed Champions theme tend to sell on nostalgia and recognizability first, which is why a smaller piece count set like this one can still command strong collector interest among Fast and Furious fans.

What other builders say

This write-up is grounded in real reviews and builder discussion, not just one opinion. A few worth reading:

More reviews

All reviews