Mattel Just Killed The Brick Vibe

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Seven new sets dropped. Lego better be watching.

Mattel’s Brick Shop has been quietly humiliating the Danish giant since 2025. Realistic cars. Actually functional. Now the lineup just expanded with seven new kits priced anywhere from $21.59 up to $129.59

The Money Shot

The headline here is the 1:12 scale Lamborghini Miura P400 SV. Premium Series status means premium details. We are talking 1,524 pieces that click together into something that looks terrifyingly real.

Opening doors? Check. Removable roof? You bet. A detailed interior that you can actually see? Yes. It even sports a metallic engine block and premium metal elements —real steel in your wheels and steering wheel isn’t a trick.

It’s steep though. $129.59 hurts the wallet. But hey. You get a 1:64 Hot Wheels die-cast replica included. And enough customization options to lose an afternoon building. It’s for ages 17+ so don’t even ask if you can let the kids near it unchaperoned.

“Premium metal elements”

Middle Weight Fighters

Then there’s the Elite Series. Three new entries. $53.99 each. A reasonable middle ground between “affordable hobby” and “mortgage payment.”

The standout is the 1984 Audi Sport quattro. 1:16 scale. 864 pieces. Functional hood. Functional trunk. Functional steering wheel—actually turns the front axle, mind. A removable roof lets you show off the inside while RAYS licensed metal wheel covers give it that street cred.

Want something else? Maybe the Aston Martin Vantage GT3? It’s smaller. 793 pieces. Or the 1994 Toyota Supra MKIV? That one has 824 pieces plus a nitrous bottle stashed in the trunk for flavor. Decals, lights, rally mods. All included.

Who doesn’t need more plastic on their desk?

The Cheap Thrill

If $50 is too much, look at the Speed Series. Three sets. $21.59 a pop.

The Lamborghini Huracán Sterrato and the Corvette C8.R sit here. Both 1:32 scale. About 260 pieces apiece. They still have opening doors. They still have removable roofs. They even include their own 1:64 Hot Wheels counterparts.

There is a 1983 Chevrolet Silverado too. It’s been lowered—slammed low for style. Only 223 pieces but it packs multiple wheel sets. For $21 you aren’t going to complain about the part count.

Preorders open now for the Miura. The rest follow.

Which one do you think holds its resale value better? Probably doesn’t matter if you just build it to take apart