Just now at CES (Consumer Electronics Show) in Las Vegas, USA the LEGO Group revealed their new innovation: LEGO® Smart Brick, which will premiere in three March LEGO® Star Wars™ sets.
Our team member Zach Hill is inside the presentation hall, and we now also have the official press release. Read on for details!
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Here is the beginning of the presentation!
It is apparent the technology is within a special 2x4 brick (that is slightly taller than usual; 5 plates high) as well as 2x2 tiles and minifigures.
Product info
The sets containing LEGO SMART Play
LEGO® Star Wars™ SMART Play™: 75423 Luke’s Red Five X-Wing™
- Availability: Pre-order 9 January 2026, Available 1 March 2026
- Price: 89,99 EUR / 99,99 USD / 79,99 GBP/ 149.99 AUD/ 389.99 PLN
- Ages: 6+
- Pieces: 584
- Dimensions: The set measures over 2 in. (6 cm) high, 8.5 in. (22 cm) long and 7.5 in. (19 cm) wide
A 584-piece set, including two SMART Minifigures (Luke Skywalker, in his iconic pilot suit, and Princess Leia), as well as Luke’s trusty companion, R2-D2, and Rebel Crew and Stormtrooper Minifigures.
This set includes an Imperial turret, transporter and command center, all of which unlock interactive features, such as laser-shooting sounds, engine sounds and lights plus refueling and repair sounds, through the use of the included LEGO SMART Brick, two LEGO SMART Minifigures and five LEGO SMART Tags.
LEGO® Star Wars™ SMART Play™: 75421 Darth Vader’s TIE Fighter™
- Availability: Pre-order 9 January 2026, Available 1 March 2026
- Price: 69,99 EUR / 69,99 USD / 59,99 GBP/ 99.99 AUD / 299.99 PLN
- Age: 8+
- Pieces: 473
- Dimensions: The set measures over 4 in. (10 cm) high, 4 in. (11 cm) long and 5.5 in. (15 cm) wide
LEGO® Star Wars™ SMART Play™: 75427 Throne Room Duel & A-Wing™
- Availability: Pre-order 9 January 2026, Available 1 March 2026
- Price: 159,99 EUR / 159,99 USD / 139,99 GBP/ 249.99 AUD/ 699.99 PLN
- Age: 9+
- Pieces: 962
- Dimensions: The set measures over 5.5 in. (14 cm) high, 11.5 in. (29 cm) long and 19 in. (49 cm) wide
Fans will be able to re-enact and re-imagine one of the most memorable moments from the original Star Wars trilogy, the final lightsaber duel between Luke Skywalker and Darth Vader at the end of Star Wars: Return of the Jedi™. The 962-piece set comes with three SMART Minifigures featuring the characters Darth Vader, Emperor Palpatine and Luke Skywalker (Jedi).
Additionally, the set comes with a brick-built A-Wing Fighter and Pilot Minifigure, two Royal Guard Minifigures, and a SMART Tag-enabled cannon turret to defend the Emperor’s Throne Room.
Official press release
Introducing LEGO® SMART Play™: Bringing your creations to life
What is LEGO SMART Play™?
For over 90 years, the LEGO Group has sparked imagination and creativity in children around the globe. As the world evolves, so do we— innovating to meet the play needs of each new generation. LEGO SMART Play™ is the next exciting chapter in our LEGO System in Play and something we are super excited about being able to bring to the world at this scale.
The launch of LEGO SMART Play™ brings creativity, technology, and storytelling together to make building worlds and stories even more engaging, and all without a screen. We truly believe we are setting a new standard for interactive, imaginative experiences and can’t wait to see this innovation in the hands of kids when we launch this year.
Our teams work hand-in-hand with best-in-class licensees to bring technology and innovation to products that continue our storytelling in new and unexpected ways. This milestone in our long-time collaboration with the LEGO Group adds a new dimension to this legacy, continuing to help fans express their creativity and imagination by extending the Star Wars story through play.
– Paul Gitter, Executive Vice President of Global Brand Commercialization at Disney Consumer Products
We’ve worked with our incredible friends at Lucasfilm for over 25 years, and our focus has always remained on creating original, unique experiences for the fan community through our sets. With LEGO SMART Play, legendary stories and characters of the Star Wars galaxy will come to life like never before.”
READ MORE: See all the new LEGO® parts in January 2026 sets
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Being an adult, I only bought the Mario figure out of curiosity and never played with it, I wonder if kids really did, and really wanted this.
ReplyDeleteAlso, as an adult again, I'm pretty sure the brick won't be any programmable (at least without hacks) (because LEGO), and thus useless for MOCing.
Meanwhile the competition is doing things that people have asked for (buildings with lights). It still looks like LEGO isn't any interested in LED lighting, while the side market for that clearly exists.
But again, I'm adult and I'm sure LEGO did their homework testing out this thing with kids. But... they supposedly also did this with Vidiyo...
I think it's pretty obvious why Lego wouldn't want something like this programmable—you don't want people programming in inappropriate sounds and then an unsuspecting kid getting that secondhand.
DeleteBut I don't know if that makes it "useless for MOCing" since you could easily use, say, a helicopter tag for a helicopter MOC or a car tag for a car. Yes, the sounds will only be the ones that go to the tag in question, but that's really no different from previous sound bricks that were set-specific.
I think those Bricks also work standalone just work the RFID Tiles. I actually used one of the write able RFID Dimensions parts to store information for a birthday present. May be there will be times that can be written. I mean we had great sound bricks before (Alien abduction sound) Gate opening from Agents, now this is all in one Brick. I think it is great. I just hope the thingy is not blinking all the time and control with the Tiles can make MOCs interactive.
DeleteWell, as far as I know, there are no MOCs that use existing sound bricks, except for the alternatives of the sets that the sound bricks were included in. Isn't that inconvenient for MOCing?
DeleteThey said it plays audio and lights based on the tags. So in theory, one could customize the tags to play any sound. They might try to lock these down, but if there is a way to put firmware updates on these, then there is a way to fully unlock and cusomize the brick's behaviour. If we only manage to make lights blink in a certain way, that already unlocks a ton of MOC possibilities. Looking at the PyBricks project, I am quite hopeful about all of the situation. (Can't wait for these to go on sale though)
DeleteGenerally all the light and sound configurations would be preloaded into the main chip (in the brick, in this case) and then the tags trigger specific ones, they aren't reading files stored on the tag chips. So the most you'd likely be able to do is make duplicates of existing triggers, unless you can find some hidden files or funny jailbreaks. I had a thing like this with some Phantom Menace figures I'd gotten at the time, they included a little stand/chip that you could tap onto a reader and it would cycle through 4-5 sound clips related to that character. It was a fun system. "As an adult" it doesn't do much for me, but as a former kid I remember "ooh it lights up!" being a decent selling point on a lot of things, including the initial wave of Exo-Force sets.
DeleteLEGO's newest attempt to force app connectivity into plastic block playsets aside—is that a new astromech droid torso mold?
ReplyDeleteThe app is just to update the brick I imagine.
DeleteThe astromech is a new element, I believe it has a 2x2 SNOT surface on the back for the tag and no studs on the top (connecting the dome with a pin). The X-Wing canopy is also a new element with a very interesting shape, so I'm interested to see that analysis.
There was no mention of an app during the conference, yes there might be one for updates, charging, brick status etc. but it seems like all the play features are standalone and screen-less. Refreshing to see among everything else at CES.
DeleteIt would be great if something on this web page explained what the technology actually does. It's kid of hilarious that nothing here does -- it's all the why and marketing, none of the what or how.
ReplyDeleteit lights up and makes noises, responding to direction and motion with accelerometers. its buried in the marketing stuff, but thats all it appears to do
DeleteIf you have Instagram you can see @zaxbrix Stories with clips of the live demo.
Deletehttps://www.instagram.com/stories/zaxbrix/3803575924215141961?utm_source=ig_story_item_share&igsh=OTAwdmNkaWlic3oz I'm currently working on adding his clips to this page.
Full video now added to the page, what you're after starts at 5:27 https://youtu.be/co9yCTA9-rE?si=rBU7X-qDDHLJuEne&t=322
DeleteIt also has color sensors and relative positioning to other Smart Bricks and Smart Minifigures, and the behavior can be set with special 2x2 tiles - Smart Tags.
DeleteDo you know when PAB will get updated with new pieces?
ReplyDelete