How the LEGO Ideas 2025 Second Review Works
The LEGO Ideas 2025 second review is shaping up to be one of the biggest decision points the theme has ever seen. The Ideas team has confirmed that this round includes 146 fan-designed projects that reached 10,000 votes and are now being evaluated for potential release as official sets. Historically, each review only produces a small handful of winners, meaning well over 100 projects are likely to be turned down this time. The process combines design feasibility, licensing, production constraints and market appeal, so popularity alone is never enough. For fans, this review is a mix of excitement and nerves: the odds are long, but the sheer size of the line-up raises hopes that the team might approve more than usual, potentially reshaping the future Ideas release schedule for years to come.
Wishlist vs. Reality: What Fans Want and What LEGO Might Choose
From a fan perspective, many dream picks in the LEGO Ideas 2025 review lean heavily into characterful worlds and original concepts. Gravity Falls – The Mystery Shack, Working Modular Fairground, Islands in the Sky and Avatar the Last Airbender – Netflix represent that wishful shortlist: deeply themed builds, strong storytelling and displayable models that still invite play. These projects showcase everything from inventive wall-mounted islands to fully functional fairground machinery. Realistically, though, the pattern of recent Ideas selections points toward recognisable pop culture, clever functionality and broad appeal. That is why more grounded predictions include projects such as Garfield, Rubik’s Cube: Fully Functioning Model, National Lampoon’s Christmas Vacation – Griswold House and Jumanji Game Board. They tick proven Ideas boxes: nostalgia, mainstream brands, and display pieces that also work as conversation-starting objects.

The New LEGO Pirates Ideas Set Proposal and Its Easter Egg Potential
Among the most exciting LEGO fan projects on the horizon is a fresh Pirates-themed submission in the Ideas pipeline, which offers a useful lens on what could thrive in future reviews. The project by George Brickman is a 2,120-piece, modular 3D map made from swappable ocean and island sections. Each module features tiny pirate ships, sea monsters, forts and mountains that can be rearranged into custom island layouts, creating a buildable cartographic diorama. What makes it especially tantalising is its Easter egg potential. Designers could hide microscale homages to iconic pirate sets like Pirates of Barracuda Bay, reference classic ships via printed tiles, or nod to more recent pirate-adjacent releases. Given LEGO Ideas’ history with sets such as Ship in a Bottle and Pirates of Barracuda Bay, this concept neatly bridges nostalgia, display value and playful experimentation.

Reading the LEGO Ideas Tea Leaves: Trends, Patterns and Odds
Looking at recent Ideas releases helps narrow down which LEGO fan projects might survive the 2025 second review. The theme has favoured life-sized objects and functional display pieces, making a working Rubik’s Cube feel like a strong contender. Movie nostalgia, especially from the 1980s and classic family films, remains another clear trend; Home Alone paved the way for more seasonal houses, which strengthens the odds for a National Lampoon’s Christmas Vacation – Griswold House build. Character-based sets, such as Gizmo, point towards the viability of a buildable Garfield that capitalises on the character’s renewed popularity. Meanwhile, the Jumanji Game Board sits at the intersection of all these trends: cinematic nostalgia, a board-game format and an existing relationship between LEGO and the property. None of this guarantees success, but it does highlight which submissions align most closely with established Ideas strategies.

Why This Review Matters for Malaysian LEGO Fans
For Malaysian LEGO fans, the LEGO Ideas 2025 second review is more than a distant global event. Themes like Pirates, modular fairgrounds and licensed nostalgia resonate strongly with local collectors who often balance limited display space with a taste for detailed, story-rich builds. A flexible map-style Pirates concept or compact but intricate sets like a working fairground or Jumanji board would suit smaller apartments while still offering big play and display value. Pop culture favourites such as Gravity Falls, Avatar and Garfield also tap into fandoms that are very active across Malaysian social media communities and local hobby groups. Because Ideas sets usually arrive as one-off, highly curated releases, every review round shapes what will appear on local shelves for the next few years. For fans here, that makes following the predictions – and rooting for personal favourites – feel genuinely high stakes.
