This LEGO Sushi Boat Looks So Delicious You’ll Want to Eat It

This LEGO Sushi Boat Looks So Delicious You’ll Want to Eat ItYou know that feeling when a sushi boat arrives at your table, loaded with technicolor rolls like a floating parade of umami dreams? Now imagine...

Jun 6, 2025 - 02:15
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This LEGO Sushi Boat Looks So Delicious You’ll Want to Eat It

You know that feeling when a sushi boat arrives at your table, loaded with technicolor rolls like a floating parade of umami dreams? Now imagine that, but made entirely out of LEGO bricks. It shouldn’t work—but it absolutely does.

Spotted on LEGO Ideas, this brilliantly bizarre build is a brick-for-brick homage to the traditional Japanese “funamori” platter—those iconic wooden boats used to deliver sushi in theatrical fashion. The model, designed with a chef’s eye for detail and a builder’s obsession for geometry, swaps raw fish for ABS plastic, and the result is weirdly mouthwatering.

Designer: Luke Jenkinson (eat.sleep.build.repeat.)

At a glance, the layout hits all the notes: twelve assorted maki rolls, tamago sushi with a sleek black nori wrap, twin nigiri pieces, two generous scoops of ikura (salmon roe), and even a blocky ebi (shrimp) with exaggerated stripes that somehow look juicy. The color-blocking is dialed in perfectly—lime green bricks for wasabi-tinted rolls, layered orange for the salmon slabs, and even stylized printed tiles to emulate cross-sections of fish and avocado. You can almost hear the clack of chopsticks.

The set also includes a full buildable place setting: a dipping dish of soy sauce, modular chopsticks, and a trio of side garnishes—ginger, wasabi, and some sprigs of LEGO foliage standing in for shredded daikon or decorative leaves. There’s even a tiny sushi chef minifigure wielding a cleaver, with rolled sleeves and that classic black-and-white tenugui headband. He looks ready to defend his omakase at all costs.

The boat itself is a sleek, tan construction with a minimalist Japanese flag at the stern, and a mast at the center that’s more symbolic than functional—just like the ones you’d find on real sushi boats in upscale Tokyo eateries. Built on a blue LEGO base plate shaped like rippling water, it’s practically an art piece on its own.

According to the LEGO Ideas submission, the entire build clocks in at around 800–900 pieces. It’s modular, so every sushi piece is removable, meaning this doubles as both a display set and a tactile, rearrangeable play experience.

The post This LEGO Sushi Boat Looks So Delicious You’ll Want to Eat It first appeared on Yanko Design.