After years of fans begging, praying, and digitally screaming through the LEGO Ideas platform, LEGO has officially announced that a Mighty Morphin Power Rangers set is going into production. The set will feature the legendary Megazord, all five of the primary Zords, and—praise Zordon—all five original Rangers as mini figs. It’s basically every ‘90s kid’s dream made of plastic bricks. Well, almost. Because while we’re thrilled this thing is real, we’re also kind of squinting at it like, “Wait, that’s the version you’re going with?”
The announcement came courtesy of LEGO Creative Lead Jordan David Scott, who dropped the news in a new LEGO Ideas blog video. The MMPR set—submitted by fan designer TrumanBricks—was one of six ideas that hit 10,000 supporters and got the official thumbs-up from the LEGO Review Board. That’s a big deal, considering Power Rangers submissions have been flooding LEGO Ideas for years. This time, though, the Morphin Grid finally aligned with the stars and the cosmic entities that be took pity on our tear-filled prayers.





Unfortunately, the actual fan design that got approved looks… fine. Not bad. Not terrible. Just, you know, the kind of fine you say when your friend shows you their new haircut and you’re still processing it. Sure, it’s incredible that all five Zords can combine into one massive Megazord, but the Rangers themselves? They’ve got painted-on helmets. Like, no molded helmets. Just helmet faces printed directly on the minifig heads. Somewhere, a Power Rangers fan just let out a slow, disappointed sigh. And that fan was me. And then probably you, while reading this.
If LEGO is serious about doing this right—and they should be—then they need to go full throttle on the details. We’re talking actual helmets, alternate hairpieces, and a Megazord that looks a little more intimidating than what TrumanBricks delivered. The current design feels a little too “my first Megazord,” and that’s not going to cut it for fans who have been waiting literal decades to morph their nostalgia into brick form.
As for the other five LEGO Ideas sets announced in the same video? We… didn’t really pay attention. There could have been a flying castle made of ice cream and sentient ducks for all we know. Once someone says “Megazord,” our brain tune everything else out.
Scott ended the video by noting that the Review Board is still refining the set and that updates will roll out later, once LEGO decides when we can start camping outside Target with thermoses and sleeping bags. We’re cautiously guessing a 2026 but likely a 2027 launch—though if it takes longer, that’s fine. We’ve waited this long.
Just, you know… make it awesome. We’re not asking for much—just a childhood dream realized in the most badass way possible. After all, if you’re going to make a Megazord out of LEGO, don’t half-build it. Go go all the way.

