If there’s ever a LEGO set to experience building again to truly appreciate and even better understand, look no further than LEGO Icons
There are certain LEGO sets that grab your attention with clever play features or unique artistry that, upon closer inspection, you can already begin to understand how they have been built. You can deconstruct with your eyes and see these parts here and those parts there, how they work together, and what the end result is.
Then there are LEGO sets that pull you in for something just as amazing, you stare at for ages, sort of recognise what you are looking at, but have no idea how it all works as it does. And then… there’s

We’re not saying that this is an overly complex build that is at a level most of us cannot work through – it’s as accessible as any of the other advanced 18+ Icons sets of the past couple of years. It is also a precise build with various Technic parts and gears used along the way, and one that requires full concentration at every step.
It will also have you thinking after you’ve put it altogether that – of course – there is no other way that this could be built and yet also, you’ll sit there still perplexed as to how all those logical and now obvious ideas were dreamt up by the LEGO design team and that they all come together so well as to create this working model, within that fine of a detailed maze, angled upright just as the real arcade screen was, built inside a slim but effective casing just like the real thing.
It’s confusing, baffling, wonderous and enjoyable all at once and is one of those LEGO sets you may just be better off not worrying too much about the ‘how’ before moving on to the ‘play’.
And while there are a handful of hands-on play features at work in LEGO Icons
After creating the maze in all its glory – in a way that your eyes have no choice but to accept this as the very same game you’ve played a thousand times before, from the black and blue walls and little illuminated dots to the ‘power pellets’, ghosts and the titular character himself – turning that handle actually moves Pac-Man and two of the ghosts (in our case, Blinky and Pinky) to run around a section of the course, just like the real game.
Separately, a third ghost (Inky) moves on its own smaller course around the maze, and separately again the fourth ghost (Clyde) moves side to side as they wait to exit the central box.
That’s three individual movements that continuously circulate as you turn the one handle on the side. It’s a smooth, easy movement that sees the model come to life in a way that from a LEGO perspective is truly one-of-a-kind and from a play perspective instantly transports you back to playing the real game.
Indeed, even though
It's a highlight set from 2023 and one that continually sells well (indeed, it’s on back order until 2024 now), particularly for how, as with our top LEGO set of 2023 – 77015 Temple of the Golden Idol – it offers everything that an adult fan of LEGO would dream of, and throws in a play feature that is so good and incredibly addictive that it takes age out of the equation. The smartest LEGO sets for adults have you unashamedly playing with them just the same as when you first got into LEGO.

This copy of LEGO Icons
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