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The official LEGO Pokémon theme page now makes one thing much clearer than before: Pokémon is not just getting a few isolated SMART Play experiments. LEGO is already showing a full 12-set SMART Play lineup, split between two All-In-One sets and 10 SMART Play Compatible sets. That matters because it gives the Pokémon range a much more defined identity inside LEGO’s new connected-play system. Instead of one starter product with a couple of add-ons, the current official page points to a genuine sub-range built around battles, exploration, training scenes and Pokémon-specific action hooks. The names also do a good job of showing the spread straight away: Charizard, Jolteon, Pikachu, Mewtwo, Umbreon, Garchomp, Eevee, Lapras, Mew, Bulbasaur, Squirtle, Cubone, Gengar and more are all represented on the official page, with LEGO already labeling which products are All-In-One and which need a SMART Brick to unlock the full experience.
This official theme-page reveal is especially interesting because it builds directly on the broader SMART Play rollout we covered earlier when LEGO first introduced SMART Play alongside its launch wave. At the time, the big question was how quickly LEGO would use the system beyond Star Wars. Pokémon now looks like one of the clearest answers yet.
It also sits neatly beside the more traditional Pokémon display and collector products already on Afol News, including our coverage of 72152 Pikachu and Poké Ball, the 72151 Eevee review and the 72153 Venusaur, Charizard and Blastoise review. What is different here is the play system: these sets are not being presented as static shelf pieces first, but as part of LEGO’s app-connected SMART Play range.

All 12 LEGO Pokémon SMART Play sets visible on the official page
The current official LEGO Pokémon page shows the following SMART Play products, with LEGO’s own labeling dividing them into All-In-One and Compatible entries.
| Set | Name | SMART Play status | Age | Pieces | Price |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 72167 | Charizard vs. Jolteon Ultimate Battle | All-In-One | 8+ | 751 | $119.99 |
| 72164 | Training House with Pikachu | All-In-One | 6+ | 400 | $69.99 |
| 72165 | Umbreon vs. Garchomp Championship Battle | Compatible | 10+ | 831 | $79.99 |
| 72166 | Cubone and Gengar's Spooky Showdown | Compatible | 8+ | 782 | $89.99 |
| 72162 | Eevee and Lapras's Treasure Hunt | Compatible | 8+ | 623 | $59.99 |
| 72163 | Mewtwo's Lab Break | Compatible | 10+ | 605 | $69.99 |
| 72161 | Drone Search for Mythical Mew | Compatible | 8+ | 429 | $49.99 |
| 72158 | Sprigatito, Fuecoco and Quaxly Battle | Compatible | 8+ | 313 | $34.99 |
| 72156 | Trainer's Buggy Adventure with Squirtle | Compatible | 7+ | 320 | $29.99 |
| 72157 | Charmander and Geodude's Cavern Clash | Compatible | 6+ | 198 | $19.99 |
| 72155 | Berry Bash with Bulbasaur and Bidoof | Compatible | 7+ | 240 | $19.99 |
| 72159 | Jigglypuff Concert | Compatible | 7+ | 88 | $14.99 |
Which LEGO Pokémon sets are All-In-One?
The official page currently marks two Pokémon sets as All-In-One, which is LEGO’s way of signaling that the required SMART Play hardware is built into the box rather than needing to be bought separately.
- 72167 Charizard vs. Jolteon Ultimate Battle: 751 pieces, ages 8+, listed at $119.99.
- 72164 Training House with Pikachu: 400 pieces, ages 6+, listed at $69.99.
That is a smart way to structure the line. It gives LEGO a lower-friction entry point for families who just want to buy one box and try the system, while leaving room for a broader ecosystem of add-on sets around it.


Which LEGO Pokémon sets are SMART Play Compatible?
The larger share of the current Pokémon SMART Play wave is marked Compatible. In plain terms, these appear to be expansion-style or companion sets designed to work with the SMART Play ecosystem rather than replace the All-In-One boxes.
That group currently includes ten products:
- 72165 Umbreon vs. Garchomp Championship Battle: ages 10+, 831 pieces, listed at $79.99. Official LEGO page.
- 72166 Cubone and Gengar's Spooky Showdown: ages 8+, 782 pieces, listed at $89.99. Official LEGO page.
- 72162 Eevee and Lapras's Treasure Hunt: ages 8+, 623 pieces, listed at $59.99. Official LEGO page.
- 72163 Mewtwo's Lab Break: ages 10+, 605 pieces, listed at $69.99. Official LEGO page.
- 72161 Drone Search for Mythical Mew: ages 8+, 429 pieces, listed at $49.99. Official LEGO page.
- 72158 Sprigatito, Fuecoco and Quaxly Battle: ages 8+, 313 pieces, listed at $34.99. Official LEGO page.
- 72156 Trainer's Buggy Adventure with Squirtle: ages 7+, 320 pieces, listed at $29.99. Official LEGO page.
- 72157 Charmander and Geodude's Cavern Clash: ages 6+, 198 pieces, listed at $19.99. Official LEGO page.
- 72155 Berry Bash with Bulbasaur and Bidoof: ages 7+, 240 pieces, listed at $19.99. Official LEGO page.
- 72159 Jigglypuff Concert: ages 7+, 88 pieces, listed at $14.99. Official LEGO page.
Editorially, that is the detail that makes this reveal feel substantial rather than cosmetic. LEGO is not just sticking a SMART Play badge on one Pokémon box. It is showing a layered range with multiple price points, from 72159 Jigglypuff Concert at $14.99 all the way up to larger battle builds such as 72165 Umbreon vs. Garchomp Championship Battle at $79.99 and 72166 Cubone and Gengar’s Spooky Showdown at $89.99.



What the official Pokémon SMART Play lineup tells us
The first thing it tells us is scale. The official LEGO Pokémon theme page is already presenting SMART Play as a major part of the range, not a side experiment. The second thing it tells us is tone: LEGO is leaning into lively play scenarios rather than only classic display models. Battles, treasure hunts, a training house, a lab break, a buggy adventure and a concert all fit that more interactive brief.
It also helps that the current page lines up with the wider official SMART Play section on LEGO.com. That makes the Pokémon range feel integrated into LEGO’s broader product planning rather than treated as a one-off test license.
For Pokémon fans, the bigger strategic takeaway is that LEGO now seems to be running two parallel tracks at once: larger collector-facing display builds on one side, and a more playful, connected SMART Play ecosystem on the other. If that balance holds, Pokémon could end up being one of the most flexible new LEGO themes in the near-term catalogue.
Bottom line on LEGO Pokémon SMART Play
Bottom line: the official LEGO Pokémon page now shows a proper SMART Play wave with 12 sets in total, split between 2 All-In-One products and 10 SMART Play Compatible releases. That is enough to treat Pokémon as one of the most serious early adopters of LEGO’s new connected-play format, and not just a license getting one or two token experiments.