
Heartbreak made Olivia Rodrigo famous, then rage made her interesting. SOUR arrived as a teenage gut-punch of betrayal and longing, all trembling ballads and bedroom devastation. GUTS answered it two years later with distortion pedals and a sneer, the sound of someone who had cried enough and picked up an electric guitar instead. The whiplash between those two modes is the most compelling thing about her, and any tribute worth its salt has to hold both at once.
The new LEGO Editions Olivia Rodrigo collection gets that completely. Across five collectible sets, the range swings from soft to loud and back again, and the flagship Dual Guitar build (43031) literally splits the difference, fusing an acoustic and an electric into one 1,228-piece object that opens to reveal hidden stage scenes inside. It is a collection that understood the assignment was always about duality, right down to the minifigures and their two faces. And like the best Rodrigo music videos, every set is salted with easter eggs you are meant to hunt down, the kind of buried references the Livies will be freeze-framing and cataloguing for weeks.
Designer: LEGO Group (Amy Corbett – Senior Design Manager)
That duality is a genuine milestone too, because Rodrigo becomes the first musician in history to receive multiple dedicated LEGO sets in one go, arriving with five new minifigures modeled on her most recognizable stage looks. The detail I keep grinning at is that every one of those minifigs carries two different facial expressions, so you can flip a single character between the wide-eyed ballad version and the snarling festival version depending on which Olivia the scene calls for. Amy Corbett led the design direction and worked directly with Rodrigo to refine each element, and that collaboration shows in how much of the collection is built around slow discovery rather than instant payoff.
The clearest proof of that is a clever piece of industrial sleight-of-hand in the LEGO Botanicals Flower Bouquet (11507). Rodrigo is the first partner LEGO has ever let personalize one of its Botanicals sets, and rather than a generic posy, the 400-piece arrangement is built around a striking purple flower assembled out of electric guitars, with further floral nods to her Filipino heritage threaded through the petals. It is the kind of part-repurposing that makes a designer grin, taking an instrument silhouette and coaxing it into a botanical form. Look closely and you will find a tiny visitor buzzing around the stems, which is exactly the sort of easter egg the Livies will lose their minds over.
The Concert Moon (43029) is the showstopper for me, a 670-piece recreation of that viral GUTS tour moment where Olivia drifts above the crowd on a giant glowing moon. What elevates it past a static diorama is the engineering tucked behind the spectacle, with hidden drawers and picture holders worked into the body of the thing, so the prop that floated over a stadium doubles as a tiny functional curio on your shelf.
The Dual Guitar (43031) earns its flagship billing the longer you sit with it, because the headline trick from up top, an acoustic and an electric fused into one 1,228-piece instrument, turns out to be only half of it. The body opens to reveal hidden stage scenes, backstage details, and secret storage compartments waiting to be decoded, one side soft and dreamy, the other ready to make some noise. From there the range dials down with the Vinyl (43028), which compresses her career into a 360-piece brick-built record display salted with callbacks and fresh clues hinting at what is still to come. And the Secret Storage (43030) closes things out, gathering her signature symbols into one 1,085-piece collectible, the red festival-tour guitar, the GUTS megaphone, a notebook pulled from those handwritten SOUR lyric books, each prop hiding a compartment that keeps it doing double duty.
So much of this collection is mechanism disguised as merchandise. A pop-star tie-in could so easily have been five pretty busts and a logo, but Corbett and her team kept asking what each object could do, which is why you get faces that swap, drawers that slide, guitars that open, and a moon that hides its own secrets. Pitched at ages nine to fourteen but plainly aimed at the adult collectors who grew up alongside this music, the sets read as display pieces with a puzzle-box heart.
The collection launches globally on August 1, 2026, at LEGO.com, LEGO stores, and selected retailers, with the Dual Guitar, Concert Moon, and Flower Bouquet already up for pre-order. Prices run from a friendly 34.99 USD for the Vinyl to 119.99 USD for the Dual Guitar, which feels fair for what is essentially a working brick instrument. If I had one wish, it would be a single playable string on that Dual Guitar, some tiny Technic mechanism that lets it twang just once. Give me that, and this goes from a great tie-in to an instant classic.