The Razor Crest
A 28-inch Mandalorian gunship that nails the show and the shelf.
Set 75331 · 2022
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If you love The Mandalorian, this one's an easy yes.
It's a big, satisfying LEGO® set that captures Din's beat-up gunship better than any version before it, and the interior play features are a genuinely lovely surprise on a display piece. The $599.99 price and a couple of fiddly bits up top are the only things standing in your way. For a fan with the budget and the space, it's about as good as UCS gets.
Best for: Mandalorian fans who want a centerpiece UCS ship they can actually open up
Here's the pitch: the Razor Crest is the ship you spent a whole season of The Mandalorian getting attached to, rebuilt in 6,187 pieces and stretching a full 72cm (that's about 28 inches) across your shelf. This is the second LEGO® set version of Din Djarin's gunship, and where the smaller 75292 was a nice midi model, this is the real deal. It landed in the Ultimate Collector Series in September 2022 and became the first ever UCS set based on a TV show rather than a movie, which is a fun bit of history for a ship this beloved.
The thing that makes this set special is that it doesn't just sit there looking pretty. The entire top of the hull and those huge engines lift off so you can see inside, the cockpit pops out for access to the sleeping quarters, and the boarding ramps unfold in two stages just like on screen. Inside you get a carbon-freezing chamber with frozen bounties, a weapons cabinet, a spot for Grogu's hover pram, and a sweet little recreation of Frog Lady's egg incubator. Reviewers loved how much play LEGO snuck into what's technically a grown-up display model, and the community landed it at a strong 4.5 on Brickset.
Now the honest part. Six hundred dollars is a serious ask, and LEGO leaned hard on stickers to get the surface detail, which stings a bit at this price when printed parts would have felt more premium. The top hull is a known weak point too, it mostly just lays on top with some flimsy pieces apart from the engines, so it isn't the sturdiest thing to move around. The canopy takes some flak as well, with an odd divot in the middle and side windows that look a touch basic. And if you're a hardcore builder chasing a brain-bending challenge, this one might feel a little gentle for its size.
So who's it for? If The Mandalorian is your thing and you've got the budget and the shelf space, this is a no-brainer and one of the standout UCS sets of its era. If you want a fighter-scale display or a fiendishly hard build, or if the sticker sheet is a dealbreaker, you might look elsewhere, and the smaller 75292 gives you the silhouette for a fraction of the cost. But as a centerpiece that fans genuinely adore, this one earns its spot. Worth noting it retired in December 2025, so it's aftermarket only now, with sealed copies already tracking around $750.
The parts story
What the build is actually like, and the pieces worth knowing about.
For a 6,000-plus piece box, this is a remarkably chill build, and that's a compliment. It's split into logical sections, so you work through the interior modules, the ramps, the cargo and freezing bays, then cap it all with the hull and those big engine nacelles. The techniques are more clever than punishing, lots of layering and clip-and-hinge work to get the ship's curved, weathered silhouette, and it rarely gets confusing despite the scale. Most builders clock it around 14-18 hours, so it's the kind of set you can happily do over a long weekend without your brain melting. The brick-built Blurrg in the final bags is a lovely little palate cleaner to finish on.
On the parts front, the headliners are the minifigures. You get four: The Mandalorian in gorgeous durasteel armor, Grogu, and two debut figures in Kuiil the Ugnaught (with a brand new molded head piece) and The Mythrol, three of which are exclusive to this set. Piece-wise it's less about rare specialty elements and more about the sheer volume of useful greys, tans, and dark red for weathered hull work, which makes it a great parts bank if you ever break it down. The catch is the reliance on that big sticker sheet for panel detail, so if you're the type who savors printed pieces, temper your expectations there. At 6,187 pieces for the RRP, the per-part value is fair for a licensed UCS ship, and it has held or gained value since retiring.
Fun facts
- 01This was the first ever Ultimate Collector Series set based on a TV show instead of a Star Wars film, a first for the whole UCS line.
- 02Kuiil arrives with a brand new molded Ugnaught head piece, and both he and The Mythrol made their LEGO minifigure debut in this set.
- 03The finished ship stretches about 72cm (28 inches) long and includes a display stand with an information plaque, classic UCS presentation.
- 04It carries a carbon-freezing chamber with stickered frozen bounties, a callback to Din hauling quarry back to Greef Karga on Nevarro.
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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