LEGO Marvel Brickverse teased for 2025 and 2026
A new teaser has appeared on the official LEGO YouTube channel for the LEGO Marvel Brickverse, bringing many Marvel sets under one umbrella.
The latest upload to the official LEGO YouTube channel references the LEGO Marvel Brickverse, a project which had only been mentioned in one other place online. This trailer provides some context for a topic discussed on June 25’s episode of the official Marvel podcast, where the LEGO Group’s Jesper Nielsen and Disney’s Jesse Falcon discussed the project.
“The idea of the Brickverse is that it’s a universe that you can build, play in and control,” explains Jesse. “The coolest thing about Marvel is the storytelling. The Marvel team are master storytellers, and the LEGO team have built over nearly 100 years this incredible play ability with this fluid building pattern whereby Jesper and his team of master builders can make an amazing set, whether it’s the Marvel logo or something from Endgame or something from the Spider-Man movies, and contextualize that.
“The coolest thing about what the LEGO Group has that nobody else does is the ability to take that set and combine it with all your other LEGO sets and retell a story the way that you want to do it. And that’s really what the genesis of the Brickverse is. It’s an idea of storytelling that allows the kids, or the kids of any age, to command that story through the Marvel Brickverse.”
This quote describes the LEGO Marvel Brickverse as a name for a collection of sets, be they inspired by movies or comics, that can exist in one LEGO universe, and looking at recent releases, this title is starting to make sense. 76311 Miles Morales vs. The Spot from earlier this year is based on the Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse movie, but can be combined with the comic-inspired 76324 Spider-Man vs. Oscorp and 76317 Peter Parker’s Apartment to create a cohesive street scene.



“There’s a ton of huge environments that are built out by fans,” adds Jesper. “I love that, and you see a lot of them have been building out stuff like huge New York settings. And, to some extent, we are getting there, also in the play version of it now, where we’re trying to make it possible for kids and adults to build out the world of LEGO, so you can build out a full street for Spider-Man.”
The podcast goes on to discuss some models that are in the works for 2026 and form part of the Brickverse range, though details are kept appropriately light.
“We have some stuff that is in the pipeline that we’re going to be putting out there pretty soon that’ll help support the Brickverse,” states Jesse. “We’re going to be rolling that into 2026. This one’s a little different, because it’s not just going to be something that we’ll celebrate over one year. It’s going to last for a longer time.”

Whether this is referring to additional street sets or something more to expand the LEGO Marvel Brickverse is unknown, but the focus on specific location settings in the discussions is notable. Amazon Australia already displays the Brickverse branding on the overall LEGO Marvel page.
Keep the LEGO Marvel Brickverse in mind as we near 2026, and it might be worth noting it down ahead of San Diego Comic-Con, where such a superhero collection would be appropriate as the subject of the LEGO Group’s booth.
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