Venom Mech Armor vs. Miles Morales
A quick, punchy little brawl that hands a kid a mech suit and a monster in under half an hour.
Brick Rated Score
Set 76276 · 2024
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This one is built for speed, both in the build and in the play.
Miles Morales climbs into a chunky, posable mech suit while Venom shows up as an oversized, snarling big figure with those signature drippy tendrils, and the two of them are made to be smashed together the second the last piece clicks in. I like it for exactly what it is, a fast, satisfying pocket-money set rather than a display piece. If you want a shelf showpiece, this is not it, but if you want something a young Spider-Man fan can finish in one sitting and then actually play with, it earns its place.
Best for: kids and casual Spidey fans who want a fast build with real play value, not a display piece
What it is
I went into this one expecting a filler set and came out liking it more than I thought I would. Miles Morales gets his own mech armor here, a boxy exosuit he clips into like a little cockpit, with enough joints in the arms and legs that he can actually take a fighting stance instead of just standing there looking stiff. Across from him is Venom, built as an oversized big figure rather than a standard minifig, with that hunched, muscular shape and the black and white color blocking that makes him instantly recognizable even at a glance from across the room.
The catch
The honest caveat here is scale and complexity. This is a 134 piece set, which puts it firmly in impulse-buy territory, and the build itself is over quickly, even for a younger builder working solo. Venom's big-figure body is put together from a handful of oversized specialty pieces rather than clever brick-built engineering, so if you are the kind of person who loves discovering a clever technique mid-build, you will finish this one wanting more. It is also worth knowing going in that you only get the one true minifig, Miles, since Venom does not count toward that total the way a standard figure would.
Who it's for
Where this set really lands is with a kid who wants to act out a fight between hero and symbiote the same afternoon they open the box. The mech suit's posability and Venom's imposing size make for a satisfying tabletop battle, and the low price and quick build mean it is an easy yes as a stocking-stuffer or a reward for finishing homework. If you are shopping for a serious display piece or a deep, technical build to sink an evening into, skip this one and look higher up the Marvel lineup instead.
The parts story
What the build is actually like, and the pieces worth knowing about.
Building this is quick work, closer to a snack than a meal. The mech suit goes together first, a boxy torso and limb assembly that clicks onto Miles with peg joints doing most of the work, and within a few minutes you have something sturdy enough to stand on its own two feet. Venom's big-figure body follows the same fast rhythm, a small handful of large specialty elements that snap together rather than a long sequence of standard bricks, so there is not much in the way of a slow reveal here.
The standout piece is Venom himself. His big-figure mold, with the hunched shoulders and clawed hands, does a lot of visual work for very few pieces, and the black body with white spider emblem and jagged mouth print carries the whole set's personality. Miles Morales's mech suit uses chunky articulated panels that are simple to assemble but genuinely fun to pose afterward. For a set this small the part count is really about play value rather than build satisfaction, you are paying for two toys you can smash together, not for an afternoon of intricate technique.
Fun facts
- 01Venom appears here as an oversized big figure rather than a standard minifig, a build style LEGO has used for hulking Marvel villains since sets like Rhino and Green Goblin's earlier appearances.
- 02Miles Morales's mech armor is one of several kid-scale exosuit builds LEGO introduced across its 2024 Spider-Man wave, giving younger fans a suited-up alternative to a plain minifig.
- 03At 134 pieces this sits near the entry level of the Marvel Super Heroes lineup, aimed squarely at fast, affordable play rather than display shelf competition with the larger Spider-Man sets.
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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