Lego has long catered to cinephiles, particularly those with a penchant for lightsabers and X-Wings, but it’s only in the last few years that the world’s best known toy company has started really paying attention to video games. And if you’re a Lego-loving gamer in 2023, you really are spoiled for choice.
From intricate adult builds aimed at those who cut their teeth playing Pong in arcades, to kid-oriented brick-built recreations of the Mushroom Kingdom, there’s something to tempt gamers of all ages (and budgets), and we only expect that range to expand. For now, though, here are the best video game-themed Lego sets you can currently buy, with the ranking order to be determined by you lot.
Best video game Lego sets
The Sega vs. Nintendo feud that dominated the ‘90s might be slightly less intense these days, but if you’re a Lego fan with an allegiance to the former, you can let everyone know with this Sonic the Hedgehog set. The included Blue Blur minifig can be positioned anywhere on this brick-built recreation of Green Hill Zone, the most recognisable Sonic level of them all, complete with a bridge loop, a lever-activated spring, and several golden rings. Dr. Eggman is buildable too, as well as his Eggmobile. A must-have for all the Mega Drive heads.
Given how successful Nintendo’s collaboration with Lego has been, it was only a matter of time before Sony started imagining how the many mascots of PlayStation might get the plastic brick treatment. The first of these sets is the awe-inspiring Tallneck from the Horizon series. Designed for adults and standing at 34cm high, this is one you’ll want to have on display. It also comes with an Aloy minfigure and a buildable Watcher robot.
Another mind-bogglingly clever invention - this one celebrating perhaps the only video game character as famous as Mario - the 2,651-piece PAC-MAN Arcade is based on a real 80s cabinet, and while it’s not a functional game, you will build a mechanical maze that is surely the next best thing. And if one PAC-MAN arcade machine wasn’t enough, there’s also a miniature scene of a minifigure playing the iconic game to build, which is stored away inside the big version.
Launched to coincide with Atari’s 50th anniversary, this is the build for the gamers who have been plugging in joysticks since day one. If you had an Atari 2600, this brickified replica will be instantly familiar, as will the three cartridges that actually slot into the console, each coming with its own buildable 3D vignette.
Mario might have been the first gaming mascot to get the Lego treatment, but Sonic has beaten him to the company’s fun BrickHeadz range. Numerous characters from the worlds of Disney, Marvel and Star Wars have been recreated as chunky BrickHeadz models, but if you were a Sega kid, how can you not add the world’s most famous hedgehog to your collection?
There are now countless extension sets that make up the Lego Mario line, including the new Donkey Kong one mentioned elsewhere in this list. But if you have a youngster who wants to start their own collection, the Adventures with Mario Starter course is where to begin. It comes with an interactive Lego Mario figure that can be moved about on a suitably gamified re-buildable course, with enemies to overcome and seven action bricks that trigger different reactions from the plumber. A nifty app includes step-by-step building guides.
- The best Lego Star Wars sets, according to the experts
SOMETHING MISSING FROM OUR SHORTLIST?
Tell us about it, and if enough people agree we'll add it in.
Get exclusive shortlists, celebrity interviews and the best deals on the products you care about, straight to your inbox.
Matt Tate is a freelance journalist and contributor at for Shortlist. Formerly Stuff Magazine’s news editor and based in the UK, he’s been writing about consumer tech for around eight years, with a particular focus on gaming.
For his sins, Matt is a huge Tottenham Hotspur fan and unfortunately spends a lot of his time scanning his published work for Spurs-related digs that may have been slyly inserted by editors. Otherwise, he’s often buying Lego sets he can no longer accommodate and trying to perfect his carbonara recipe. He can be found tweeting (mostly about football and video games) at @MattWTate.









