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LEGO 77093 Ocarina of Time – The Final Battle is a much smaller Zelda set than 77092 Great Deku Tree 2-in-1, but that is also what makes it interesting. Rather than trying to retell a whole world, LEGO focuses on one of the most memorable moments in The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time: Link, Zelda and Navi facing Ganon among the ruins of Ganon’s Castle. At 1,003 pieces and $129.99 in the US, this is not a cheap impulse buy, yet it sits in a more reachable part of the adult-gaming range than many premium display models. The result is a set that lives or dies on clarity of concept. Fortunately, 77093 understands its own brief well. It is a compact display-first Zelda diorama built around a large brick-built Ganon, a ruined tower backdrop and three key characters, and that focus gives it more presence than the piece count alone might suggest.


LEGO now has a second official The Legend of Zelda set on shelves, and 77093 takes a very different approach from the larger Great Deku Tree 2-in-1. Where 77092 was expansive, nostalgic and more obviously premium, this new model is about concentration. It picks one late-game Ocarina of Time scene and turns it into a compact display piece built around confrontation, silhouette and character recognition.
That makes this review fairly straightforward. If you want a broad Zelda centerpiece, the bigger set still offers more scope. If you want a cleaner, more focused scene that is easier to display and significantly less expensive, 77093 makes a stronger case than it might at first glance.
Set overview
- Set name: Ocarina of Time – The Final Battle
- Set number: 77093
- Theme: LEGO The Legend of Zelda
- Pieces: 1,003
- Minifigures: 3
- US price: $129.99
- Availability: available now in 2026 according to LEGO’s official product page
What 77093 gets right straight away
The smartest decision here is scale discipline. LEGO did not try to cram in too much scenery or overbuild the environment just to inflate the box. The scene is built around the essentials: a large brick-built Ganon, a ruined section of Ganon’s Castle, and Link, Zelda and Navi in a display that is clearly meant to evoke the final confrontation rather than reproduce every inch of the battlefield.
That is exactly the right call for a set like this. Ocarina of Time fans do not need every fragment of rubble to identify the moment. They need the emotional outline of the battle, and LEGO seems to understand that.
Official set material also points to some thoughtful fan-service details. The LEGO designer interview says the team hid recovery hearts behind removable debris and included the Megaton Hammer as an option, which is the kind of game-aware detail that helps a licensed display piece feel made by people who actually understand the source material.
Design and display value
The star of the set is clearly Ganon. LEGO’s product description describes him as a detailed brick-built figure, and that tracks with the whole value proposition of 77093. This is not a minifigure-scale playset. It is effectively a character-vs-monster diorama where the villain provides the visual mass and drama.
That choice works for display. A large enemy model instantly gives the set a focal point, while the ruined tower backdrop helps the scene avoid looking too toy-like or too empty. If LEGO has balanced proportions well in person, this should be the kind of set that reads clearly from a distance on a shelf.
It also helps that the environment sounds restrained rather than overdecorated. Too many gaming display sets fall into the trap of turning every reference into surface clutter. Here, the concept seems tighter: recognizable architecture, one iconic boss encounter and just enough debris and structure to frame the action.
Minifigures and game accuracy
The minifigure lineup is one of the main reasons this set matters. LEGO highlights Link, Zelda and Navi, and the official designer interview makes another point that will matter to collectors: the team wanted a cast that felt complete alongside the earlier Great Deku Tree set.
That is a smart franchise-level decision. 77092 already gave fans Link and Zelda, but 77093 appears designed to turn Zelda into something closer to an actual shelf subtheme by pairing those heroes with Ganon and a decisive late-game scene.
In accuracy terms, the concept is strong because it goes straight for an unmistakable Ocarina of Time moment. There is less room here for thematic drift than in broader “inspired by” display sets. If the prints and accessories are sharp, this should land well with Zelda fans who care about scene recognition as much as raw build complexity.

Build experience
Without a full hands-on build, the official material still gives a decent idea of what to expect. The likely rhythm is a mix of structural ruin work, scenic detailing and character construction, with Ganon providing the most complex and satisfying section.
That should make 77093 more engaging than a scenery-heavy diorama with one static centerpiece. A big brick-built creature usually creates a better sense of progression during the build, and the ruined tower should add some welcome textural contrast.
The set may also benefit from being smaller than the Deku Tree. Big premium models can be impressive but also repetitive in places. A 1,003-piece review candidate like this has a better chance of feeling focused from start to finish.
Where 77093 feels less convincing
The obvious pressure point is price. $129.99 for 1,003 pieces is not shocking by modern licensed-adult standards, but it is still expensive enough that the set has to justify itself through presence, character quality and brand pull rather than value-per-piece comfort.
That means 77093 is unlikely to win over non-Zelda buyers. If you do not already care about Ocarina of Time, this probably looks like a compact gaming diorama with a large creature and some ruins. The emotional value is doing a lot of the work here.
There is also a ceiling on spectacle simply because the set is built around one scene. That focus is a strength, but it also narrows the audience. Some collectors may prefer the broader, more iconic shelf presence of 77092 Great Deku Tree 2-in-1, especially if they only plan to own one Zelda LEGO set.

Pros and cons
Pros
– Strong scene selection from one of the most loved Zelda games
– Large brick-built Ganon should give the display real shelf presence
– More affordable entry point to LEGO Zelda than the Great Deku Tree
– Good franchise-building character choice with Link, Zelda, Navi and Ganon in one display context
– Designer comments suggest thoughtful game-specific details rather than generic fan service
Cons
– Premium pricing for a 1,003-piece set
– Much narrower display concept than 77092 Great Deku Tree 2-in-1
– Probably less appealing to buyers outside the Zelda fan base
– Final verdict still depends heavily on how convincing Ganon looks in person
Is LEGO 77093 worth buying?
For Zelda fans, the answer looks close to yes. Not because 77093 is cheap, and not because it is bigger than expected, but because it appears to be conceptually disciplined. It knows which moment it wants to represent and builds the whole set around that confrontation.
For general LEGO collectors, the verdict is more selective. This is not the kind of licensed display set that transcends its source material in the way some of LEGO’s best Icons or Ideas releases can. Its value is closely tied to affection for Ocarina of Time.
That said, there is a real argument that 77093 may end up being the more satisfying day-to-day Zelda shelf piece for many buyers. It is smaller, easier to place, visually immediate and centered on one of the franchise’s defining battles.
Final verdict
LEGO 77093 Ocarina of Time – The Final Battle looks like a smart second step for the Zelda line. It does not try to outscale the Great Deku Tree. Instead, it goes for clarity, character recognition and display efficiency. If the final physical model delivers on the promise of the official photos and designer commentary, this should be one of those mid-priced licensed sets that feels more distinctive than its footprint suggests.
It is not the obvious best-value gaming set of the year, and it will not be essential for everyone. But for fans of Ocarina of Time, this looks like a focused and appealing display piece that understands exactly why the scene matters.
Score: 8/10