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28 January 2026

New moulds review: LEGO® Speed Champions January 2026 sets 77253, 77254 and 77257

Posted by Tom Loftus

We continue our analysis of the LEGO® Speed Champions January 2026 sets with a look at four exciting new moulds that can be found in sets 77253 Bugatti Vision GT Hyper Sports Car, 77254 Ferrari SF90 XX Stradale Sports Car and 77257 McLaren W1.


Products in this article were gifted by The LEGO Group; the author's opinions are their own.
This article contains affiliate links to LEGO.com; we may get a small commission if you purchase.

77253 Bugatti Vision GT Hyper Sports Car

  • Release date: 1 January 2026
  • Pieces: 284
  • Price: US$27.99/ £22.99/ 27.99€/ AU$39.99

77254 Ferrari SF90 XX Stradale Sports Car

  • Release date: 1st January 2026
  • Pieces: 339
  • Price: US$27.99/ £22.99/ 27.99€/ AU$39.99

77257 McLaren W1

  • Release date: 1st January 2026
  • Pieces:  287
  • Price: US$27.99/ £22.99/ 27.99€/ AU$39.99
Set 77253 on LEGO.com
Set 77254 on LEGO.com
Set 77257 on LEGO.com

 

Corner cheese slopes

2026 may as well be remembered as the Year of the Cheese, because not only has it introduced a 1x3 (7825) and 1x4 version (7835) – both found in 77256 Time Machine from Back to the Future – but also the long awaited corner cheese, in two variants:

Currently, each comes in only one colour and set respectively, but surely it's only a matter of time before these gems are more widespread:


We also spotted a pair of the latter in 72153 Venusaur, Charizard and Blastoise from LEGO Pokémon, releasing February 2026 – though let's be real, you’d have to be crazy to buy that just for a couple of cheese slopes! Right?

Placing the newbies alongside regular cheese slopes is very satisfying – clearly the roofs of micro-scale buildings look set for some major upgrades. 

Interlocking the convex and concave versions works too, and the resultant height is just as peculiar as it is with regular cheeses. 



They join the ranks of other right-angle corner/pyramid slopes that have been around some time - it really is a wonder that the equivalents for the beloved cheese slope have taken this long to arrive.

The fact both new types are 1 x 1 and not extended to a 2 x 2 corner area – like Brick Curved 2 x 2 x 2/3 Double, Corner (79757, circled above) – is a little surprising. Differentiating between regular, concave and convex varieties is surely going to be a problem moving forward, but the elements certainly have more utility with a 1 x 1 footprint.


One downside of this ultra-compact approach is that the top of the convex slope has to be flattened to prevent it from becoming too sharp and possibly fragile. Comparable slopes retain their sharp points so presumably there's a "maximum pointiness threshold" defined somewhere in the part designer's handbook.


Here's some quick experiments using multiples of each variety. If you've always wanted to make a minifigure-sized origami fortune teller, now you can (bottom left)!


2 x 2 Wedge Tiles

Could 2026 also be the start of the Age of the Wedge Tile? Time will tell, but the year is off to a good start:

With only 45° wedge tiles existing to date, new varieties like these 2 x 2 27° left (7828) and right (7829) varieties have been another element family that fans have been yearning for, so it's encouraging to see a good range of colours right off the bat, with complete pairs of each: 

77253 Bugatti Vision GT Hyper Sports Car 

  • Dark Azure (6589647 & 6589651)
  • Dark Blue (6573686 & 6573687)

77254 Ferrari SF90 XX Stradale Sports Car

  • Red (6602157 & 6602155)
  • Trans-Black (6602158 & 6602156)

77257 McLaren W1

  • Orange (6593853 & 6593855)

We also spotted some in black and magenta in the upcoming 77258 - F1 Academy LEGO Race Car, releasing 1 March 2026.


There's not much to discuss geometry-wise – as advertised, they're studless versions of wedge plates (left, 24299 and right, 24307). Although, it is amusing how they sort-of resemble short-shot 2 x 2 tiles from the underside, where not enough plastic has entered a mould.


The lack of studs isn't just useful for aesthetic purposes as demonstrated by the nose of the Ferrari and Bugatti, where parts are positioned on top of the tiles in ways regular wedge plates wouldn't allow. 


It's good to see the LEGO wedge tile family get some new members. Hopefully more will follow, and perhaps we'll even see some existing wedge tiles turned into wedge plates; 5091 & 5092 (pictured above lower left in bright light orange) seem like prime candidates!


We're not done with these sets just yet: in an upcoming article we'll cover their remaining new elements, recolours and printed parts... and build the sets too.


Set 77253 on LEGO.com
Set 77254 on LEGO.com
Set 77257 on LEGO.com
 

 

READ MORE: Review of the LEGO® Star Wars™ 75440 AT-AT™: is it good value?


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