The biggest Pokémon LEGO set money can buy just got a lot easier to actually buy. The LEGO Pokémon Venusaur, Charizard, and Blastoise set, priced at $649.99, has landed on Amazon as a preorder listing after spending its entire existence as a LEGO Store exclusive.
For Pokémon fans who have been keeping tabs on this set since LEGO first dropped its official Pokémon line earlier this year, this is the opening you have been waiting for. The LEGO Store exclusivity window kept it out of reach for anyone without easy access to a physical store or the patience for a direct online order.
What makes this set worth $650
The set brings together the three fully evolved Kanto starters: Venusaur, Charizard, and Blastoise. Each one is fully posable and built within its own themed biome. The biomes are designed to connect into a single display piece or stand alone as separate decorations, which gives collectors real flexibility depending on shelf space.
Here's the thing: for a set at this price point, the posability detail is what separates it from being just a static statue. These are not fixed-pose display figures. You can actually adjust them.
The rest of the LEGO Pokémon lineup
The Venusaur, Charizard, and Blastoise set is the flagship, but LEGO launched two other display sets alongside it. The $200 Pikachu and Poké Ball set sits in the middle of the range, and the more accessible $60 Eevee rounds out the adult collector tier at a much friendlier price.
All three sets are built for display rather than play, which puts them firmly in the same category as LEGO's other high-end adult lines.
For younger builders, LEGO has a separate wave on the way. 12 Smart Play Pokémon sets are launching August 1, featuring characters like Pikachu, Charizard, Mewtwo, Gengar, and more. These are built around active play rather than shelf display, so they serve a completely different audience.
The Pokémon collector moment happening right now
The timing here lines up with a broader surge in Pokémon merchandise momentum. Pokémon Pokopia, the Minecraft-style building game that has been pulling in serious player numbers, has put the franchise front and center for a new generation of fans who are just as interested in collecting as they are in playing. If you have been spending time in Pokopia and want to check out what the game does well beyond the surface level, our in-depth review breaks it all down.
The crossover between digital Pokémon fandom and physical collecting has never been more active. A $650 LEGO set landing on Amazon right now is not a coincidence, it is a brand capitalizing on peak Pokémon cultural relevance.
How to actually get it
The listing is live on Amazon now as a preorder. Given that this was previously locked to the LEGO Store, availability could shift depending on demand once the preorder window closes. If the $649.99 flagship is more than you want to spend right now, the $60 Eevee and $200 Pikachu sets are also worth considering as entry points into the line.
For players deep into Pokémon Pokopia who want to make the most of the game while the Pokémon hype cycle is in full swing, the Pokémon Pokopia guides collection covers everything from early-game priorities to advanced mechanics worth mastering.








