Yanko Design

Someone Built a True-Scale LEGO Velociraptor Skeleton and I Can’t Wait To Buy One

Jurassic Park lied to you. The velociraptors that terrorized a kitchen full of children and hunted Jeff Goldblum through tall grass were modeled after Deinonychus, a considerably larger North American cousin, because the filmmakers thought the real animal’s name sounded cooler than its actual dimensions warranted. The real Velociraptor mongoliensis stood about 1.6 feet at the hip and weighed roughly as much as a medium-sized dog. Formidable, certainly, but built to the scale of a farmyard bird rather than an apex predator capable of coordinated ambushes.

Which is exactly what makes this LEGO Ideas submission by creator Terraxz so interesting. Built to true scale from paleontological measurements of a juvenile V. mongoliensis specimen, the model sits at approximately 120 cm long and 40 cm tall on a museum-style display stand. It has the ribcage, the vertebrae, the sickle claw, the whole skeleton rendered in tan brick. LEGO has been on a fossil skeleton tear lately, but nobody has attempted one at actual 1:1 scale until now.

Designer: Terraxz

LEGO’s Dinosaur Fossils line began as a fan submission that became the 910-piece Ideas set 21320, featuring T. rex, Triceratops, and Pteranodon skeletons at 1:32 scale. LEGO then escalated with the Jurassic World set 76968, a 3,145-piece T. rex skeleton stretching over 105 cm at 1:12 scale, which launched in March 2025 and immediately became the largest Jurassic World set the company had ever produced. Every iteration in this lineage has been a scaled-down representation, a display piece calibrated for shelf real estate rather than scientific fidelity. Terraxz is doing something structurally different: the model matches the actual size of the animal it depicts, which reframes the whole exercise from decorative object to physical argument about what the creature actually was.

Look at the skull closeup and you can see individual tooth rows built from stacked brick elements, fenestrae represented as open negative space through clever plate offsetting, and a jawline that actually captures the elongated low-profile snout that distinguishes V. mongoliensis from the broader-headed Hollywood version. The spine runs in a proper S-curve, the tail extends horizontally as it should for a bipedal theropod using it as a counterbalance, and the legs are proportioned correctly for an animal that stood 0.5 meters at the hip rather than eye level. The black display armature borrows the same museum-mount language as LEGO’s official sets, with cross-braced vertical supports that would look at home in any natural history gallery.

A fully adult V. mongoliensis reaches around 1.8 to 2 meters in length, which would push this build into genuinely unwieldy display territory. Choosing a juvenile specimen is a calibrated decision that keeps the model physically manageable while maintaining the true-scale claim, and it maps to real fossil record data: a complete juvenile skeleton described from the Djadochta Formation gives the builder a legitimate scientific reference point rather than an averaged extrapolation. Terraxz has a catalog of related MOCs on Rebrickable, including a true-scale V. mongoliensis skull, so this submission is the culmination of an ongoing paleontology project rather than a standalone pitch.

LEGO Ideas requires 10,000 supporter votes within the submission window for a design to enter official review, and Terraxz currently sits at just over 1,000 with 605 days remaining. That’s enough time to accrue the votes needed to turn this into a retail set. I’m pretty sure that a whole bunch of people beyond
paleontologists would like a to-scale velociraptor skeleton adorning their bedroom or hallway. The submission is live on the LEGO Ideas website, and it takes about thirty seconds to cast your vote, so what exactly are you waiting for?

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