At one time the largest Lego sets ever made, the UCS Lego 75192 – Millennium Falcon™ is comprised of 7,541 pieces including 7 minifigures. This Ultimate Collector’s Series set remains the biggest Lego Star Wars set in the Lego inventory of sets, and measures 33 inches long by 22 inches wide. After months of having my eye on this set the time came over Christmas of 2024 as I finally convinced my wife that it was worth the long-term investment. I still cannot believe that line worked… But inventory issues delayed the purchase and I finally ordered online from Lego.com in January with the package arriving in early February 2025. Finally, after patiently waiting, the biggest and most expensive LEGO Star Wars set ever made arrived at my back door. Here is a review of the build and the set as a whole.
Upon opening the main box, four long, white, rectangular boxes filled things inside with each great Millennium Falcon artwork. Like Lego has for years, the specifically numbered bags are disbursed throughout the four boxes to keep anyone for acquiring all of the mini figures in a single bag. The instructions were in a sealed paper bag as Lego looks to use less plastic in their packaging, something I experienced for the first time with this set. The beginning of the build, bags 1 and 2 (of a total of 17 numbered bags), were all about building the structure and foundation of this incredibly sturdy Lego set.
Bag 3 is where some of the detail starts to come into play with the building of the holochess (aka dejarik) table and some of the details of the outer parts of the ship. The rear of the ship gets rounded out in the following bags as well as the structure of the triangular sections in the front of the Falcon.
Bags 7 & 8 see the outer shell of the Millennium Falcon starting to fill in, first under the ship and then more of the top of the ship. The build itself is a fun one mixing the tedious small detailed sections and larger, more fulfilling sections of the Millennium Falcon.
The Bags numbered 9 built out the top cover for the two triangles at the front of the ship, while 10 and 11 is where we went back to the underside of this massive LEGO set, adding the floor to one side of the Millennium Falcon and the entrance ramp on the other side as well as the top pieces for both sections. In addition, the turret on the underside of the ship is also in this section.
As we get to bag 12 it is evident that the top of the ship is the focus, and the detail is incredible. While building the set I mentioned to my son how many pieces are used outside of their original intent. Roller skates, robot arms and tank treads are used to give detail and texture to the outer parts of the ship in very clever, creative ways.
Bags 13 and 14 continue to fill in the top of the ship, from the back rounded part of the Falcon, to the middle front of the ship. With just 3 bags of LEGO remaining, the Millennium Falcon™ is getting closer and closer to completion and is almost finished.
In the end, the UCS Lego 75192 – Millennium Falcon™ features modular, removable panels that reveal a fully detailed interior, including:
- Main hold with Dejarik holochess table
- Rear compartment with hyperdrive and engineering station
- Gunner’s station with seating for minifigures
- Interchangeable radar dishes (Classic Trilogy round and Sequel Trilogy rectangular options)
- New cockpit design with room for multiple minifigures
- Landing gear, turrets, and boarding ramp all functional