Star Wars

The Mandalorian's N-1 Starfighter

A chunky, swooshable little starfighter with the best Din Djarin minifig LEGO had made up to that point.

Brick Rated Score

4.2 out of 54.2/5

Set 75325 · 2022

Pieces412
Minifigs4
Year2022
Set number75325

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 picked this one up expecting a quick, forgettable build and ended up genuinely charmed by it.

The nose cone construction and those layered engine pods are more clever than a 412 piece set has any right to be, and the moment I clicked Grogu into his little passenger pram behind the cockpit, I was sold. It is not screen accurate in its proportions, and I noticed that the second I lined it up against pictures from the show, but as a desk piece and a play set for a Mandalorian fan it just works. Get it if you love the Book of Boba Fett era or want that first properly printed Din Djarin face, skip it if strict scale accuracy is what makes or breaks a Star Wars set for you.

Best for: Book of Boba Fett fans and anyone who wants Din Djarin's first printed-face minifig without hunting down a pricier set

The full review

What it is

I did not expect to like this ship as much as I do. It is Din Djarin's grey Naboo-style starfighter from The Book of Boba Fett, and the build leans into chunky, tactile shapes rather than fiddly greebling, which makes it a genuinely fun sit-down build rather than a chore. The cockpit pops open, there is a proper cargo bay, and Grogu gets his own tiny floating pram nook tucked in behind the pilot's seat, which is the kind of small design touch that made me smile the first time I found it.

The catch

I will be honest about the proportions, though. Compared to the actual show ship, the engine pods on this model sit wider than they should, and the whole thing builds out roughly a quarter bigger than true minifigure scale. If you are the type of builder who lines every set up against screenshots, you will clock it fast. And at its original sixty dollar price tag for 412 pieces, this one sits right at the edge of feeling like good value rather than a steal, especially next to other Star Wars sets in the same size range.

Who it's for

If you are into the Mandalorian era of Star Wars, especially Book of Boba Fett, this is worth having just for the minifigs alone, since it was the first set to give Din Djarin an actual printed face instead of a blank helmet, plus first appearances for Peli Motto and the BD droid. If proportional accuracy to the screen ship is what you care about most, or you already own a few of the larger Mandalorian vehicles, you can safely let this one pass.

The parts story

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

Building this one felt more substantial than its part count suggests. The hull comes together in confident, chunky sections rather than tiny repetitive steps, and the layered engine pod assembly was the part that actually got my attention, it is simple in concept but looks properly finished once it clicks together. The cockpit hinges open smoothly and the cargo bay in back has just enough room to feel like a real ship rather than a shell built around minifigs.

The real value here is in the minifigs, not just the plastic. Din Djarin comes with a printed face under the helmet for the first time in a LEGO set, which was a big deal for collectors who had been stuck with faceless Mandalorian figures for years. Peli Motto and the BD droid also make their LEGO debuts here, and Grogu comes along in his own little rocking pram accessory. For anyone building a Book of Boba Fett display, this set is basically the cheapest way in to that specific minifig lineup.

Fun facts

  • 01This was the first LEGO set to give Din Djarin a printed face rather than a plain helmet, ending years of faceless Mandalorian minifigs.
  • 02Peli Motto and the BD droid both made their first-ever LEGO minifig appearances in this set.
  • 03The model builds out roughly 25 percent larger than true minifigure scale compared to how the ship appears on screen.
  • 04BrickEconomy projects the set retiring around mid to late 2026, with secondhand value already trending upward since release.

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