Triceratops Rampage
A theme park ride and a rampaging Triceratops in one surprisingly playful box.
Brick Rated Score
Set 75937 · 2019
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What won me over here is that this set does not do the usual Jurassic World thing of a jeep chasing a dinosaur through the jungle.
Instead you get a spinning teacup-style egg ride, a ticket booth, a collapsing fence, and a Triceratops that just barrels through all of it the moment a kid gets their hands on it. The dinosaur mold itself is genuinely lovely, a real step up in color and texture from the last Triceratops LEGO made years earlier. I do think the sticker sheet is a lot for a set this size, and the price feels steep against the piece count, but if you want a Jurassic World set built around fun rather than firepower, this is the one I'd point you to.
Best for: kids and Jurassic World fans who want theme park play over jeep chases
What it is
What won me over about this set is that it does not follow the usual Jurassic World playbook. Instead of a jeep chasing a dinosaur through the jungle, you get a theme park attraction, a spinning egg ride with a ticket booth and signage, plus a fence that is built to collapse the second the Triceratops decides to headbutt it. That is such a smart choice for how kids actually play with these things. The Triceratops itself is the real star. It uses a mold LEGO had not put back into a minifigure scale set in years, and the new color scheme, all warm browns with cream horns, looks so much better than the earlier version. The head turns, the legs move, and it has genuine presence sitting next to the little park set pieces.
The catch
I will be honest about where this set stretches thin. Stickers are everywhere, five just on the small signpost and something like eighteen across the egg ride seats and structure, which is a real test of patience if you or your kid like clean building sessions. At $59.99 for 447 pieces, a chunk of which is one big dinosaur figure rather than lots of small builds, the value math does not scream bargain the way some other sets in this price range do. The fence and gate sections are also noticeably modest scale next to the size of the Triceratops, so do not expect a sprawling park layout.
Who it's for
If you have a kid who wants to reenact dinosaurs busting up a theme park rather than reenact a chase scene, or you are a Jurassic World collector who wants this specific Triceratops mold and its four minifigures, I would go for it, especially if you can catch it discounted. If you are chasing piece count value or you hate sticker sheets, there are better uses of your money in this theme.
The parts story
What the build is actually like, and the pieces worth knowing about.
Building this one is really two builds in one. First comes the compact park attraction, the ticket booth, signage, and the egg ride with its spinning mechanism, which is fiddly in a satisfying way once the gears click together. Then you move to the Triceratops itself, which is a chunkier, faster build focused on getting the legs, head, and frill to articulate properly. The collapsing fence section at the end is quick but genuinely fun to snap back together after knocking it down, which is exactly the kind of repeat play value a kid set should have.
The standout piece is the Triceratops mold in its new brown and cream colorway, a real improvement over the older release and one of the better dinosaur figures LEGO had made up to that point. The egg ride seats carry printed and stickered detail that add a nice theme park feel once assembled, even if applying eighteen stickers to them takes patience. You also get four minifigures, Owen Grady, Simon Masrani, Allison Miles, and an unnamed park visitor, each with double sided faces and front and back torso printing, which pads out the display value nicely for a set this size.
Fun facts
- 01The Triceratops mold in this set had not appeared in a minifigure scale Jurassic World set in about seven years before this release.
- 02The set includes roughly nineteen stickers just on the egg ride structure alone, covering the Jurassic World logo, orange stripes, and speckled egg detail.
- 03It launched in June 2019 at $59.99 and was officially retired in December 2020.
- 04The Egg Spinner ride actually functions, letting the three egg seats spin around the central post.
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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