![]() Well, that is if you ignore the glaring upgrades to this castle from the 1978 “All Yellow, All the time” concept. The 90 years of play logo in the lower right is one of the few immediate indicators that you’re not looking at an actual vintage set. Like the 40657 Forest Hideout, the styling leans heavily into retro theming and colors. ![]() This set comes in a massive, tab-sealed box. ![]() Providing TBB with products for review guarantees neither coverage nor positive reviews. The LEGO Group provided The Brothers Brick with an early copy of this set for review. Are you ready for a trip down memory lane? For starters, though, we take a very close look at the surprises and secrets in the Lion Knights’ Castle itself. This set is SO massive, in fact, that we had to split our our review of the twenty two included minifigures into “part two”. LEGO Icons 10305 Lion Knights’ Castle is a massive, 4514 piece love letter to the theme that will be available to VIPs on August 3rd (and everyone on August 8th) for US $399.99 | CAN $499.99 | UK £344.99. But just wait until you check out what LEGO has unveiled for their 90 Years of Play celebration. The theme fell mostly dormant in 2014, with only a recent return with 2021’s Creator 3-in-1 31220 Medieval Castle and 910001 Castle in the Forest sets. Starting out in 1978 with the set 375 King’s Castle, we’ve seen dozens of sets over the years. The Castle theme was an early cornerstone of the LEGO line. ![]()
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