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42210 2 Fast 2 Furious Nissan Skyline GT-R (R34) Car
- Release date: 1 June 2025
- Pieces: 1410
Price:
- US$ 139.99 on LEGO.com US
- CA$ 179.99 on LEGO.com Canada
- GB£ 129.99 on LEGO.com UK
- AU$ 249.99 on LEGO.com Australia
- NZ$ 269.99 on LEGO.com New Zealand
- DE€ 139,99 on LEGO.com Deutschland
- NL€ 139,99 on LEGO.com Nederland
- FR€ 139,99 on LEGO.com France
- PLN 619.99 on LEGO.com Polska
- NOK 1899,90 on LEGO.com Norge
- DKK 1199.95 on LEGO.com Danmark
Instructions
The set’s “18+” classification means that the hefty instructions book, clocking in at 344 pages, contains a short intro about the model and its real-life inspiration.
That short intro mentions the real car’s silver and blue colour scheme, and the photo above shows it.
Sticker sheet
As is typical of LEGO racing cars, the stickers are abundant. Sadly, I don’t think most will be of much use for anything else, as they reproduce a very specific pattern on a very specific car. Even the rectangular stickers that contain more regular stripes, such as for example #21, #26, #27 and #32, can’t be used as ordinary warning stripes due to the variation in the spacing between blue and grey.
The silver (or in this case grey) lining is the very fact that they’re stickers and not factory-applied prints on parts: while stickers on parts don’t look as good, they offer the option of not being applied and therefore leaving the respective parts clean for MOCs. Curiously, while the car in the film has plenty of sponsor decals, especially on the bonnet, all but “Toyo Tires” are absent from the LEGO version.
The build
The elements are split between 8 numbered bags. As is usual with Technic cars, construction starts at the rear axle, progresses along the chassis towards the front axle, and then the body goes through the same back-to-front process.
The first bag builds not only the rear axle, but also the beginnings of the steering mechanism, here dominated by the azure 20T gear (6396480 | 69779).
After bag 2 is done, the chassis is extended towards the front as expected, but notably the linkage for the drifting function is also completed.
Bag 3 further extends the chassis, including the longitudinal axles for transmission and steering. We also build the driver’s seat and the three Nitrous Oxide (NOS) bottles.
Bag 4 adds significantly advances the build, with the whole front axle and the I6 engine.
The bags are neatly divided: whereas the first four dealt with the chassis, the other four deal with the bodywork. The parts of Bag 5 feature the set’s only printed parts, the rear fenders:
- 1x Technic Panel Car Mudguard Arched 11 x 5 x 2 #32 with Blue Stripes (Left) in Light Bluish Gray (6546190 | 2509)
- 1x Technic Panel Car Mudguard Arched 11 x 5 x 2 #32 with Blue Stripes (Right) in Light Bluish Gray (6546191 | 2509)
The construction process continues its progression towards the front, by adding the doors and the A-pillars that are built from wishbone suspension arm 13 x 6 x 3 aka “Escher beams” (5429).
Finally, Bag 8 finishes the front of the car, including the bonnet, and concludes the build by adding the wheels and their covers, which are an exclusive new mould in this set; 4x Wheel Cover 6 Spoke with Axle Hole - 43mm D. in Light Bluish Gray (6508515 | 6687).
The finished model

As for functions, let’s get the basic ones out of the way first: the doors, bonnet and boot all open. This makes it easier to see the engine, the driver’s seat and controls, the NOS bottles, and, less interestingly, the luggage compartment.

Speaking of steering, it can be operated from the steering wheel inside the cabin or from the 20T black gear on the roof. You can easily remove this gear and associated axle for better display, just hide them away from view in the boot.
This is the set’s most innovative feature, and what the seemingly superfluous rear differential is for. Pushing the small ball joint inside the car’s rear window moves some linkages that lower a pair of 3 x 5 castor joint (39370) with 19mm ball (52629), which in turn lift the rear wheels off the ground. The mechanism also engages a clutch that links the rear wheels to the front ones through gears, making the rear wheels spin faster.
Once the balls are lowered, they drag along the ground. All this has the effect of allowing the back of the car to slide easily in any direction while the rear wheels spin furiously, recreating the drifting behaviour these cars are known for. If you roll the car along the floor holding it by the hand-of-god control at the top, you can pull off some sick manoeuvres.
Comparing to its predecessor at the same scale, 42111 Dom's Dodge Charger, the shaping is hugely improved, even discounting the inherent differences between the two car models, and the play function (drift mode on the Skyline, wheelie bar on the Charger) works better and is infinitely more fun to play with in the newer set.
Closing thoughts
Speaking of fun, I’m absolutely not surprised that by now people have already modified this set for remote control and, judging by this video from RacingBrick, driving it in drift mode is a blast.
The inventory is a gold mine for custom builders, especially of cars. While the designers’ team’s choice of grey over silver is a weakness for display purposes, for MOCing it’s a strength: you almost certainly have in your drawers more grey parts to go with the set’s inventory than silver ones. Continuing the mineral metaphor, the diamond in this gold mine is the introduction of the more compact suspension elements.
READ MORE: All three LEGO® Spring Festival 2026 sets reviewed
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I think you put twice the same image around "The very end of the car is built from Bag 6, as well as the boot." ;)
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