Review

LEGO Marvel 76294 X-Men: The X-Mansion review

By Rob Paton · October 18, 2024
LEGO Marvel 76294 X-Men: The X-Mansion review

LEGO Marvel 76294 X-Men: The X-Mansion finally delivers a substantial and immersive LEGO set for the X-Men, even if it seemingly has to be modular too.

Coming in at 3,093 pieces with a minifigure line-up of 10 characters from X-Men with designs based on their appearance in X-Men: The Animated Series, LEGO Marvel 76294 X-Men: The X-Mansion is the biggest and most detailed LEGO X-Men set we’ve ever had. And it's packed with detail, story and action, delivering a LEGO experience akin to the other large-scale Marvel sets of recent years such as 76178 Daily Bugle and 76269 Avengers Tower, but at a scale and price point that feels a little more palatable for normal folk.

Release: November 1, 2024 Price: £289.99 / $329.99 / €329.99 Pieces: 3,093 Minifigures: 10 LEGO: Order now

To me, my X-Men

LEGO Marvel 76294 The X Mansion review 1 1024x683

There are a few interpretations of the X-Mansion across different media for the LEGO Group to perhaps have taken inspiration from, but choosing to stick to what is seen and detailed in X-Men: The Animated Series (and its 2024 reboot X-Men ’97) for 76294 X-Men: The X-Mansion makes most sense. Not only does it continue the theming seen in 76281 X-Men X-Jet and the Collectible Minifigures X-Men characters, but it also offers up a lot of fun and creative opportunities that the design team behind this set have clearly embraced.

Just as the building is visually split into three clear segments by design, so too is the build process here, as you put together the middle of the mansion top to bottom, before building the entire left side and then the right. Each section builds two levels to the property before sliding together on Technic axles, meaning that the final model is sturdy enough to stick together as one complete model, but also relatively easy to split into three cross-sections for excellent access inside.

And for how each room is really given a good flavour of story and design, you’ll want to have good access inside.

The story and design worked into the set is important to acknowledge as more than just fan service too. Whilst the wider build techniques within the set aren’t necessarily the most complicated, and the best comparison is with the simpler techniques found in the Modular Buildings Collection (as opposed to anything more technical that some other 18+ sets can offer), 76294 X-Men: The X-Mansion remains as interesting and fun to put together as more intricate LEGO sets thanks to the story beats and character nods that are worked in at almost every turn, making the most of the novelty and appeal of the source material.

X-pansive inside

LEGO Marvel 76294 The X Mansion review 33 1024x683

Inside 76294 X-Men: The X-Mansion there is a lobby, downstairs study, as well as a lab upstairs, a bedroom that could be for any number of the characters but seems to most point towards the absent Jubilee, and a two-level Danger Room complete with observation deck up top and big X-marked entrance door down below.

There's a lot to appreciate in every room, including nods to which minifigures and characters you may find in each one, relevant to their roles within the team or the powers they possess, and to what we may have seen on screens before (including those absent from the set, such as Collectible Minifigures 71039 Marvel Series 2's Beast). There’s plenty going on in every corner of the house, but clearly the fun happens in that Danger Room.

Much as 76218 Sanctum Sanctorum had removable panels built into the walls to customise the play and display of that set, so too does 76294 X-Men: The X-Mansion up and down the Danger Room, with smaller, interchangeable versions of those same panels built into both levels. Each panel has a different set of weapons or instruments or obstacles built into them, so swapping them around can change the configuration of the room entirely.

Not only is this a consistent LEGO experience from a previous Marvel set, but is also a simple, very effective and incredibly fun solution to tie into the purpose of the Danger Room, which is to train different X-Men with any combination of devices and traps they may face on the field.

The Danger Room will draw a lot of your initial attention and rightly so, but the other rooms are just as lovingly detailed and thought-through. There's the study with a sliding chalkboard, which reveals a computer screen analysis of a Sentinel that is just off from a main lobby with a giant X worked into the floor. Above that is the lab where you’ll find an MRI scanner, an X-ray of Wolverine’s Adamantium-fused arm lying around, and a large curved windscreen with internal sticker to represent Cerebro and Professor Charles Xavier’s ability to detect and reach humans and mutants alike.

Plenty of what we have seen and enjoyed in the balance between everyday life, training and the dramas of being X-Men is played out nicely within 76294 X-Men: The X-Mansion.

There’s always a room or two that you could list as absent – a communal area such as a kitchen sounds like a silly request but is the sort of area where we see a lot of everyday life for the X-Men in the show, while if we are doing bedrooms then those of a few different characters would have been interesting to see. But the priority rooms that tell the story and offer the best play opportunities are arguably all packed within the 48x32-stud footprint of 76294 X-Men: The X-Mansion.

X-ceeds X-pectations

LEGO Marvel 76294 The X Mansion review 15 1024x683

If the interior of the X-Mansion is for story and character, the front exterior is for play and action, thanks primarily to the huge buildable Sentinel included in the set, but also due to some clever build techniques dotted around the building that speak to the level of chaos and destruction that the X-Men and this Sentinel create when they clash.

Walls are in a frozen state of being ripped apart, a fire hydrant is flying up into the air with a plume of water underneath it, a lamppost is tipping over and the ground is beginning to break. Combined with a number of different trans-clear pieces (and positions on the ground and in the walls that these can be connected), you can place any of the X-Men in all sorts of action poses to bring to life a real sense of their powers in action. If we were nitpicking, it’s only to say that the ability to split the set into three sections would have been even better if it wasn’t in straight lines, but in zig-zags to mimic even greater damage being inflicted on to the building, but we really are nitpicking there…

As it is, the outside action all complements the giant Sentinel wonderfully and really draws the big purple-and-pink robot into the set in a way that otherwise just placing it in front of a calm and neat mansion would not have done so, particularly for how the simplicity of the cartoonish design of the mansion otherwise makes for a quite plain exterior. Putting the mansion into action immediately gives it life and a lot more interest and is a smart decision on the part of the LEGO Marvel design team.

LEGO Marvel 76294 The X Mansion review 93 scaled

The height of the Sentinel is also perfectly aligned to the building it is attacking, meaning it looms quite menacingly over any nearby minifigures, whilst as a design it is nicely rounded and with enough movement and action built into its body to allow for great interaction with the mansion and with the various X-Men minifigures.

The selection of minifigures included is likewise what you would expect, offering most of the most immediately identifiable X-Men, including long-awaited debuts for the likes of Gambit, Bishop and Jean Grey (beyond her 2012 SDCC minifigure). Iceman is also a new face, as is Professor X, albeit for his minifigure being given an old, overused headpiece. It works, but something unique for such an important character would have been better.

Rogue, Cyclops and Wolverine carry over from 76281 X-Men X-Jet, with Cyclops at least getting printed legs even if a dual-moulded hair and laser piece to go over his eyes would have been much better than the quite goofy eye-glass he seems to be carrying around to activate his power. Magneto’s classic design gets an upgrade and a new rubber cape, whilst Storm is sufficiently different (not better or worse) than her appearance in the recent Collectible Minifigures series. She loses the leg printing but comes with a two-colour cape, different hair piece and a darker skin tone making use of new colour ‘Umber’, as it is listed on BrickLink.

Yes, there are missing characters like Beast (who we also got in 71039 Marvel Series 2), Nightcrawler (who has a poster stuck on to the outside of the back of the mansion), Jubilee (who is acknowledged with the bubblegum, boombox and Wolverine-themed calendar in the bedroom), Mystique (who is a much lesser character in the cartoons), Morph (a more prominent character in the cartoon), and any number of others who appeared in the show. But there’s little to argue with who is included, particularly for the balance between what is re-used from elsewhere and what is brand new here. And Gambit. Including Gambit is essentially all this set needed to do, and it does it so, so well.

One thing this set didn’t need to do, though, is be modular. We’re not sure at what stage 76294 X-Men: The X-Mansion may have been focus-grouped into being modular, but it is the only misstep that it takes and it leaves us with a mansion that is built right up to the edges of the three 16x32-stud baseplates it sits upon, just so it can connect to any other set designed the same way. Modular is a great concept that works so well so often, but not in this case.

The X-Mansion is always based in a country location, detached not only from neighbouring houses but from all other houses and people. While there’s the ‘option’ here to connect it to the other LEGO Marvel locations of recent years, doing so takes away from the set. It’s the same mistake 10326 Natural History Museum made last year, but where that set couldn’t escape its fate given it’s in the Modular Buildings Collection, 76294 X-Men: The X-Mansion did not need the same treatment and is the only real point where the set falls short and the understanding around the source material seems missing.

It's a smallish complaint but one worth considering when it comes to the price, as it’s only these two things that will cause you to pause, even as the cost comes in slightly lower than 76178 Daily Bugle and much lower than 76269 Avengers Tower. Everything else an X-Men fan could hope to see from LEGO Marvel 76294 X-Men: The X-Mansion is packed into this set for something that is truly fun to build and just as immersive to play with once complete.

This set was provided for review by the LEGO Group.

Support the work that Brick Fanatics does by purchasing your LEGO via one of our affiliate links, thank you!

Our honest opinion: Cleverly thought out and designed, this is an X-cellent blend of character and story across a decent-sized building and line-up of minifigures. One to save up for.

LEGO Marvel 76294 X-Men: The X-Mansion exterior

LEGO Marvel 76294 X-Men: The X-Mansion interior

LEGO Marvel 76294 X-Men: The X-Mansion characters

How long does it take to build LEGO Marvel 76294 X-Men: The X-Mansion?

LEGO Marvel 76294 X-Men: The X-Mansion comes together in about three hours in a build that is best enjoyed at a slower pace to catch all the details.

How many pieces are in LEGO Marvel 76294 X-Men: The X-Mansion?

LEGO Marvel 76294 X-Men: The X-Mansion contains 3,093 pieces including minifigures for Wolverine, Cyclops, Professor X, Rogue, Jean Grey, Iceman, Storm, Gambit, Bishop and Magneto, plus a giant Sentinel.

How big is LEGO Marvel 76294 X-Men: The X-Mansion?

LEGO Marvel 76294 X-Men: The X-Mansion measures a sizeable 38cm wide, or three 16-stud baseplates wide, and 25cm deep, or a 32-stud deep baseplate. The tallest point to the building is the top of the central dome and comes in at 27cm high.

How much does LEGO Marvel 76294 X-Men: The X-Mansion cost?

LEGO Marvel 76294 X-Men: The X-Mansion comes in at £289.99 in the UK, $329.99 in the US and from €329.99 in Europe.

Fact file

Theme
Marvel

Comments

Your email won't be published
Be respectful. No spam or profanity.