A display-worthy recreation of one of gaming's most iconic final battles
Desde las profundidades de la nostalgia, LEGO y Nintendo continúan tejiendo puentes entre la infancia y la adultez: el nuevo set de 1,003 piezas basado en The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time no es simplemente un juguete, sino un monumento portátil a uno de los momentos más definitorios de la historia del videojuego. La batalla final entre Link, Zelda y Ganon —que en 1998 marcó a toda una generación frente al Nintendo 64— encontrará ahora forma física en los estantes de los coleccionistas, recordándonos que los mitos de nuestra época no viven solo en pantallas, sino también en las manos que los reconstruyen pieza a pieza.
- LEGO acelera su conquista del universo Nintendo: apenas días después de anunciar una colaboración con Pokémon, confirma su segundo set de Zelda, señal de una estrategia deliberada para capturar el mercado adulto coleccionista.
- El set no apunta a los niños, sino a quienes vivieron Ocarina of Time en 1998 y hoy tienen dinero para convertir sus memorias en objetos de exhibición.
- Con 1,003 piezas, el castillo en ruinas de Ganon, minifiguras de Link, Zelda y Ganondorf, y una Navi translúcida, LEGO apuesta por la fidelidad emocional tanto como por la visual.
- Los pedidos anticipados ya están disponibles en el sitio oficial de LEGO, con lanzamiento en tiendas físicas y en línea programado para el 1 de marzo de 2026 a un precio de 2,999 pesos mexicanos.
LEGO profundiza su relación con Nintendo al anunciar un nuevo set basado en The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time, centrado en la batalla final del juego entre Link, Zelda y el señor oscuro Ganon. Es la segunda colaboración Zelda entre ambas compañías, tras el set del Gran Árbol Deku lanzado en septiembre de 2024, aunque esta entrega apunta más alto: una pieza de exhibición diseñada para adultos coleccionistas.
El set incluye 1,003 piezas que recrean el castillo en ruinas de Ganon, con escombros que ocultan tres supercorazones y la figura de Ganondorf. La colección de minifiguras abarca a Link, Zelda y Ganondorf en formato pequeño, mientras una figura más grande de Ganon domina la escena. Como guiño nostálgico, se incluye una figura translúcida de Navi, el hada guía que acompañó a toda una generación por los rincones de Hyrule.
El precio en México es de 2,999 pesos, sin cargos adicionales por envío. Los pedidos anticipados están disponibles desde ya en el sitio oficial de LEGO, con lanzamiento general en tiendas físicas y en línea el 1 de marzo de 2026. Con este lanzamiento, LEGO confirma su apuesta por convertir los momentos icónicos del videojuego en objetos tangibles para quienes los vivieron —y que hoy buscan reencontrarlos en sus propios estantes.
LEGO is building its way deeper into Nintendo's most storied franchises. Just days after announcing a partnership with Pokémon, the Danish toy company confirmed it would release a new set based on The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time—specifically recreating the game's climactic showdown between Link, Zelda, and the dark lord Ganon.
This marks the second Zelda collaboration between LEGO and Nintendo. The first arrived in September 2024 with a Great Deku Tree set, but this new release aims for something grander: a display-worthy recreation of one of gaming's most iconic final battles. The set contains 1,003 pieces and is designed primarily for adult collectors rather than children, though it can be used by younger builders with supervision.
What you get inside the box tells the story LEGO wants to tell. There's Ganon's ruined castle, complete with rubble concealing three super hearts and the figure of Ganondorf himself. The minifigure lineup includes Link, Zelda, and Ganondorf in smaller form, while a larger Ganon figure dominates the display. A transparent model of Navi, the fairy companion from the original game, rounds out the set as a nostalgic touch for players who spent their childhoods following that glowing sprite through Hyrule.
The set will be available for pre-order immediately on LEGO's official website, with the full retail launch scheduled for March 1, 2026. It will be sold both in physical stores and online, priced at 2,999 Mexican pesos—a figure that covers the set itself without additional charges for shipping or other fees. For collectors in Mexico and beyond, the pre-order window offers a chance to secure the set before general availability begins.
This release signals LEGO's growing confidence in mining Nintendo's back catalog for collectible appeal. The Ocarina of Time set targets a specific demographic: adults who played the 1998 original on the Nintendo 64 and have disposable income for premium display pieces. By focusing on the final battle rather than a broader world-building approach, LEGO is betting that fans want to own a tangible piece of a moment that defined their gaming lives. Whether that bet pays off will become clear once the set hits shelves in the spring.
Notable Quotes
A magnificent display piece for fans of The Legend of Zelda and Ocarina of Time— LEGO official description
The Hearth Conversation Another angle on the story
Why does LEGO think now is the right moment to release a Zelda set, especially one focused on a single battle from a game that's nearly thirty years old?
Nostalgia is a powerful currency, and Ocarina of Time occupies a particular place in gaming memory—it's the game many millennials consider the greatest ever made. LEGO is betting those players are now old enough and wealthy enough to buy premium collectibles.
But why the final battle specifically? Why not build out an entire world or dungeon?
A final battle is a complete story in itself. It has drama, recognizable characters, and a clear visual climax. You don't need to explain context—everyone knows what Ganon means. It's a moment, not a world.
The set is marked for adults 18 and up. Does that change how LEGO expects people to use it?
It signals that this is a display piece first, a toy second. You're not meant to play with it the way you would a traditional LEGO set. You build it, you place it on a shelf, and it becomes part of your home's visual language—a declaration of what you love.
What does this say about the relationship between video games and physical collectibles?
It says the line between them is dissolving. Games exist in screens, but fans want to hold something real. LEGO is the bridge—it translates digital worlds into objects you can touch and display. That's powerful.
Is there a risk that LEGO is chasing trends rather than building something timeless?
Possibly. But Ocarina of Time isn't a trend—it's a cornerstone. If LEGO can make sets from games that genuinely matter to people, they're not chasing trends. They're honoring them.