The Infamous Labubu gets its own 1,870-brick fan-made LEGO Build
The Infamous Labubu gets its own 1,870-brick fan-made LEGO BuildEvery collector knows the sinking feeling of watching a coveted toy vanish from the checkout page in under thirty seconds. If you tried scoring Pop...

Every collector knows the sinking feeling of watching a coveted toy vanish from the checkout page in under thirty seconds. If you tried scoring Pop Mart’s chaotic fuzzball Labubu this year, you have felt that sting. Limited blind-box drops flash, scalpers pounce, and the resale tab suddenly equals a month’s rent. Now, in an unlikely twist, the gremlin leaps from vinyl and plush to interlocking plastic studs, inviting even the most brick-obsessed fans into the frenzy.
Because Labubu earned those teeth. The creature, dreamed up by Hong Kong illustrator Kasing Lung and propelled by Pop Mart’s blind-box roulette, turned queuing into a competitive sport. Reports of six-figure resale prices settled the debate about its cultural weight, and the craze helped push Pop Mart’s valuation past HK$365 billion while founder Wang Ning vaulted into China’s top-ten billionaire list. The monster’s serrated grin is now as recognisable on TikTok as Hello Kitty’s ribbon.
Designer: legotruman
Enter legotruman, the LEGO Ideas powerhouse who refuses to watch from the sidelines. His new LEGO Labubu concept trades soft fur for 1,870 brightly coloured elements and five complete figures, each standing a shelf-friendly 18 centimetres tall, the same stature as the original plushes. As usual for a legotruman pitch, the digital instructions use only mainstream parts, so early adopters with a decent parts bin can prototype the squad at home before Billund makes any decisions.
Look closely and you will see how he weaponises cheese wedges and curved slopes to mimic matted fur while preserving that wild, tooth-baring grin. The lower jaw is hinged, letting the serrated smile stretch wider whenever you need a dopamine spike. Even the lone blue incisor on the “Big into Energy” variant survives translation, recreated with a translucent 1×1 round plate that sticks out like a Skittle trapped in shag carpet. Tall ears use stacked quarter-circle tiles, and a stubby tail hides a clever SNOT trick so the figure balances without visible stands.
The roster mirrors internet lore: the electric-blue gremlin, the lovestruck pink menace with heart eyes, and the overalls-clad “Time to Chill” slacker, joined by two LEGO-exclusive misfits, a retail employee in the mandatory yellow apron and a Classic Space cosplayer whose printed starry eyes shimmer under desk lamps. Because each limb connects with Technic pins, you can kit-bash a constellation-eyed overalls monster or swap fur colours to build the kind of Franken-bubu that would melt a reseller’s soul.
Beyond novelty, the mash-up feels inevitable. Labubu already hijacked social-media algorithms, and LEGO’s own AFOL community loves anthropomorphic chaos. Merging the two creates a Venn diagram of adults with disposable income and kids who simply think demon bunnies look cute. The project sits just shy of its first 100-supporter threshold with 57 days left on the clock, a window likely to slam shut faster than a restock tweet once collectors notice. And because LEGO Ideas rewards momentum with extra time, a viral push could vault the build toward the coveted 10,000-vote review.
No one knows whether the company will green-light a production box, but the prototype already tells a bigger story. Designer toys once lived on hipster shelves, construction toys in playrooms; Labubu bricks the gap, proving that internet-born characters deserve prestige builds. If you missed the plush or balked at four-digit aftermarket mark-ups, the promise of an eventual sixty-dollar LEGO set suddenly feels therapeutic. Go ahead and cast your vote for this MOC (My Own Creation) on the LEGO Ideas website to help bring it to life! So the next time you don’t have to wait to buy a Labubu… you can just build one.
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