This Leaked $300 LEGO Poké Ball Is the Most Ambitious Pokémon Set Yet, and It Opens Into an Entire World

Polly Pocket understood something most toys missed. The magic was never the doll, it was the reveal, that little hinged compact snapping open to expose a bedroom, a beach, or a ballroom shrunk down to thumbnail scale. You held an ordinary object in your palm, and then it unfolded into somewhere you wanted to live. Kids in the nineties were obsessed, and the format quietly seeped into everything since, from music boxes to those tiny terrarium necklaces that keep showing up on my feed. The appeal is ancient and reliable. A sealed shell always feels like it might be hiding a whole world, and cracking it open rewards you every time.

Somebody at LEGO has finally applied that exact logic to a Poké Ball, and the images doing the rounds suggest it was worth the wait. I want to be upfront here, because this one has not been officially announced. It surfaced through leaked imagery via the r/Legoleak community, catalogued as set 72154 and titled “Iconic Trainer Moments: Poké Ball.” What the pictures show is a sealed red-and-white sphere that splits cleanly at its equator, the top dome cradling Professor Oak’s laboratory and the lower bowl opening onto a grassy battle clearing where a Pikachu squares off against an Eevee. One object, two folded worlds, and a build that finally makes the Poké Ball do the thing it always promised.

Designer: LEGO

The two halves are arranged with proper storytelling logic, which is my favourite thing about it. The top dome is where every journey starts, Oak’s lab rendered in warm yellow brickwork with three starter Poké Balls lined up on a white counter and the professor himself standing ready to ruin your afternoon with an impossible choice. The lower bowl is the payoff, an actual battle mid-scene on a bed of bright green, with your trainer on one raised platform and a rival in a green cap on the other. Open it top to bottom and you are basically replaying the opening arc of the first game in cross-section.

Down in the lower bowl, the battlefield is built on a raised green platform with rounded studs standing in for grass tufts, tiny red flowers dotting the field, and enough negative space around it that the two minifigures genuinely feel like they are facing off across an arena. The first-ever LEGO Pokémon set to feature actual minifigures, this one has Red in his signature cap and red jacket, Professor Oak in his lab coat with a swoop of grey hair, and a Picnicker in green, alongside brick-built Pikachu and Eevee figures that surfaced in earlier leaks.

The whole thing reportedly runs to 2,343 pieces, though the leaks quibble between 2,339 and 2,386, the sort of pre-announcement wobble that usually settles by launch. That sphere is clearly doing a lot of the structural lifting, given how much of the count never makes it into the diorama you actually want to stare at.

LEGO has not confirmed any of this yet, so treat the details as pencil rather than ink, but the noise points to a first of October release at a fairly hefty $299.99, which would make it one of the priciest Pokémon sets yet. It was apparently pushed back from an August date over production issues, while the rest of the summer wave held firm. My one wish, assuming the reveal lands as expected, is a satisfying, deliberate hinge on that equator seam, because a build like this lives or dies on how good the open-and-close reveal feels in the hand. Get that right, and it is an easy centrepiece.