Power Rangers and More LEGO Ideas Submissions Are Getting Official Releases
LEGO has announced the winners of latest LEGO Ideas Review, which turns amateur submissions into real, officially released sets. This time, of the 57 qualifying submissions, there were six winners, the most the Review Board has ever approved at once. There are a couple of original builds, plus some licensed ones like Power Rangers and The Smurfs. Read on to see them all.
Before we do, it’s important to note that these aren’t the final sets. LEGO’s own designers will work on them and make changes before they become actual products. There’s no set timeline for when they’ll release, but the official versions of these prototypes are now in the works.
Go Go Power Rangers! LEGO Megazord
Go GO Power Rangers! LEGO Megazord was designed by TrumanBricks. This set, based on the ‘90s live-action show for kids, has you build the giant Megazord and five Power Ranger minifigures. But, just like in the show, Megazord can be separated into the five zords: Mastodon, Pterodactyl, Triceratops, Saber-tooth Tiger, and Tyrannosaurus. This set reminds me of the impressive LEGO Transformers sets, and is just as nostalgic (for this child of the ‘90s, anyway).
E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial
E.T. The Extra-Terrestrial was designed by Lafabrick. It depicts the weirdly cute alien holding a pot of flowers. When it gets its official release, it will join many other nostalgic sets based on classic movies, like Willy Wonka & the Chocolate Factory, Gizmo from Gremlins, The Goonies, and more.
Smurf Village
Smurf Village was designed by The Half Blood Baron. It’s a collection of mushroom houses and Smurf minifigures that you can put together and arrange however you want, kind of like some of the LEGO Botanicals flower sets.
La Catrina
La Catrina was designed by yop1172. It’s a re-creation of a symbol of The Day of the Dead, often scene during celebrations in Mexico. You can read more about it here. This joins a growing number of sets celebrating international holidays, like the LEGO Trotting Lantern.
Bowl of Ramen
ラーメン。 Ramen was designed by Micdud. It’s a cleverly devised set that has you piece together ingredients like noodles, egg, Panko-encrusted shrimp, and more to be placed into the bowl however you want. I love the buildable bowl, chopsticks, and placemat as well.
Downton Abbey: Highclere Castle
Downton Abbey: Highclere Castle was designed by BRO3. It’s been in the Parking Lot since last year (see below for more info). It includes the iconic Crawley abode, along with 15 minifigures of characters from both upstairs and downstairs.
Three LEGO Ideas Submissions Are Entering the Parking Lot
LEGO recently created a new designation for LEGO Ideas candidates that the Review Board needs more time before making a decision on. It’s called the Parking Lot, and it’s a sort of purgatory for sets that may end up getting official releases, or may not.
This go-round, the Review Board has moved the following submissions into the Parking Lot: Daft Punk Concert, The Old Man and the Sea, and Golden Girls.
New LEGO Sets for October
A host of awesome new LEGO sets arrived at the start of October 2025. These are them, many of which would make great holiday gifts for you or the LEGO fan in your life.
What Is LEGO Ideas?
LEGO Ideas is a program in which amateur designers submit their own creations for consideration to become official sets. Every submission that gets 10,000 supporters moves on for an official look by the Review Board. This batch of submissions came in between early January and early May 2025.
The next LEGO Ideas Review results, based on sets submitted in the second half of this year, will be announced in early 2026. You can read up on the program (and submit your own sets) here.
Be sure to check out our picks for the best LEGO Ideas sets available now.
Chris Reed is a commerce editor and deals expert for IGN. He also runs IGN’s board game and LEGO coverage. You can follow him on Bluesky.






