
LEGO has been on quite a streak lately with its adult-targeted Icons sets, and the latest one might just be its most interesting flex yet: a fully playable, tabletop-sized arcade pinball machine built entirely from 2,274 bricks.
Set number 11374, simply called the Arcade Pinball Machine, does exactly what you hope it does. It plays. Featuring a spring-powered launcher, dual flippers, and spinning bumpers, this is not a decorative replica meant to sit quietly on a shelf while you admire it from a distance. LEGO clearly wanted you to actually use it, and that ambition alone is worth paying attention to.
Designer: LEGO


The machine is space-themed, pulling from LEGO’s beloved Classic Space universe. The scoreboard reads “MISSION SPACE” with a bold nod to the set number itself, and two minifigures are included: a classic pale blue astronaut and the now-iconic baby astronaut, affectionately known among fans as the “space baby.” The classic spaceman minifigure also doubles as the score counter, physically moving in increments as the ball hits its targets. It’s a clever, tactile detail that completely elevates the overall playability and gives the set a mechanical personality you don’t expect.


Visually, it leans into the aesthetic of vintage tabletop pinball toys from the 70s through the 90s, those smaller home versions that captured the spirit of full arcade cabinets without the industrial footprint. The color palette is vibrant, the proportions feel deliberate, and the whole thing comes across as a genuinely considered design object rather than a novelty. The space theme gives it a clear visual identity rather than leaning on generic retro graphics, which is a choice that pays off. LEGO has been getting better at threading that needle between toy and collectible, and this set lives comfortably in that space.



Whether it fully sticks the landing is another question entirely. Some early reviewers have noted that the experience, while mechanically impressive, feels a little thin over time. The playfield doesn’t have the layered complexity of a real pinball machine, which is understandable given the constraints of building with interlocking bricks, but it does raise the question of whether the set is more satisfying to build than it is to play. Personally, I think that’s fine. Most of us buying something like this are not expecting to replace a real pinball machine. We’re buying the idea of one, the memory of one, the quiet joy of having something tactile and slightly ridiculous sitting on a desk.



And at that, this set delivers. The engineering required to make a functional pinball machine out of LEGO bricks is genuinely impressive. Getting the ball physics right, the flipper tension, the bumper response, all within the rigidity of interlocking plastic pieces, is not a trivial design problem. The team clearly cared about getting the mechanics to work, not just to look the part, and that commitment shows in the final product.



Priced at $229.99 USD, with a July 4, 2026 release date and early access for LEGO Insiders starting July 1, it sits comfortably in the range that LEGO has been targeting for its collector-grade sets. Whether that price feels justified will depend entirely on what you value. If you’re a Classic Space fan, the minifigures alone might tip the scales. If you’re a design nerd, the engineering story makes it worth considering. And if you’re somewhere in between, well, a playable LEGO pinball machine on your desk is a pretty specific kind of conversation starter that most people don’t see coming.


The LEGO Icons line has always understood that nostalgia is a serious market. People want objects that connect them to something, that make a room feel like it belongs to someone with a point of view. A space-themed pinball machine built entirely from bricks hits that note cleanly. It’s retro without being lazy about it. It’s playful without being juvenile. It is, in the best possible way, deeply unnecessary, and that’s exactly what makes it worth wanting.
