If you played with LEGO® sets as a child, you know the joyful nostalgia that seeing your old favorites can bring.
Even if the sets weren’t exactly yours, and you sort of borrowed them from your siblings, they still offer sweet memories of endless fun and creativity.
So let’s travel back in time! We’ll visit some old classics along with a couple of new sets paying homage to the most iconic themes from bygone eras.
WARNING: If you grew up in the 80s or 90s, prepare for some serious nostalgia…
Space splits into factions
In the late 1980s, two new factions blasted off from the LEGO Classic Space theme: Futuron, civilian space explorers, and their villains Blacktron. We’re celebrating their legacy with an upscaled version of the iconic asymmetric spaceship, the Blacktron Renegade. The set includes a planet-rover drop pod, landing gear and two wing-mounted space speeders, and can also be rebuilt into an enhanced version of the 1980s LEGO Alienator. It’s the perfect set for anyone who loves space or remembers their happy ’80s childhood spent running around the house holding a spaceship and making engine noises as loud as they could manage.
THE BEGINNING OF THEMES
In 1978, the LEGO Group launched a new idea. They were called ‘themes’ and were collections of sets built around distinct worlds.
Before this, we released standalone LEGO sets that didn’t necessarily slot together, and so themes were a new way of grouping sets in ways that would allow builders to create larger worlds.
Initially, there were three themes: Space, Castle and Town.
To populate these themes and allow more opportunities for creative play, the modern LEGO minifigure was created. With interchangeable body parts and fixed facial expressions, there were initially 20 original characters, including knights, doctors and an astronaut – which brings us to our first set.
SWORDS, SHIELDS AND SORCERY
The LEGO Castle theme launched with a single set, a yellow castle with a troupe of knights, a couple of brick-built horses and a range of shield insignia.
But the theme soon grew, and factions developed within it, including the Black Falcons, the Forestmen, the Wolfpack, the Dragon Masters and more, all with their own characters and storylines.
But the vintage LEGO Castle theme wasn’t all about looking back, it looked very much to the future and broke new ground. For example, the LEGO Ghost minifigure was the first non-human minifigure, and the blue wizard Majisto was the first minifigure to have an individual name.
To celebrate this beloved theme, we released the LEGO Lion Knights’ Castle, which reimagines the theme for the future. With just over 4,500 pieces and a whopping 22 minifigures, including a queen, knights, archers, wizards and forest people, and complete with hidden passages, movable walls and secret hideouts, this set will launch a thousand stories and endless opportunities for play.
MONKEYS, SHARKS AND SKELETONS
While it wasn’t part of the first wave of themes, we soon set sail to distant shores with LEGO Pirates.
Beginning in 1989, the LEGO Pirates theme was all about galleons under the skull and crossbones, buccaneers burying looted treasure on deserted islands and the ongoing struggle between the rowdy pirates and the uniformed imperial authorities.
The battle initially raged between Governor Broadside and the one-legged, one-eyed and one-handed Captain Redbeard. Over the years, dozens more characters and sets were introduced.
To celebrate this beloved theme, we’re launching a brand-new Pirates set. The LEGO Icons Eldorado Fortress is based on the Eldorado Fortress set from 1989 and comes with cannoned turrets and a platoon of imperial soldiers standing guard.
Of course, our pirates will have a task on their hands if they want to plunder the gold hidden inside, but resourceful pirates always manage to find a way.
So, why not set sail on your next building adventure and say “Ahoy” to the new LEGO Pirates set?