BrickScore Reviews

Every trusted LEGO review. One honest score.

Stop opening eleven tabs to find out if a set is good. BrickScore analyzes more than 120,000 reviews and ratings from the hobby's most trusted experts and real owners into one 0-100 consensus per set — with the reasoning, the disagreements, and the receipts. Free for everyone.

120,000+
reviews & ratings analyzed
25
trusted expert sources
1,900+
sets with a BrickScore
800,000+
extracted data points
The BrickScore review hub: every reviewed LEGO set ranked and filterable by theme, year, and score tier

The live review hub: every scored set, the Hall of Fame, and filters by theme, year, and tier.

Built like a consensus, not a comment section.

The experts did the hard part over many years. The owners did their part five stars at a time. We did the math — and wrote the rules down so we can't quietly bend them.

A weighted expert consensus

Every expert review is analyzed in depth — the verdict, the reasoning, what was praised and what was criticized — then mapped to a 0-100 score and weighted by the source's track record. The BrickScore is the weighted average. No curve, no bonus points: if every critic says 93, the set scores 93.

Owners counted separately, always

We track buyer ratings from LEGO.com, Amazon, Walmart and Target — millions of individual scores — and never blend them with the expert number. "5 expert reviews analyzed · 1,500 owner ratings" is two honest facts. When critics and owners disagree, we show you the split instead of averaging it away.

Tiers that mean something

90+ is a Must-Have (and requires at least three independent expert sources — two glowing reviews are not a consensus). 80+ Highly Recommended, 70+ Recommended, 60+ Mixed Reviews, below 60 Skip It. Over 150 sets carry the Skip It tier, because a review platform that never says skip is an ad platform.

A written verdict on every set

Every scored set carries a synthesized Review Analysis: the headline verdict, what reviewers loved and criticized, standout minifigures and parts, the value picture, and where critics disagreed — with every expert verdict attributed and linked to the original review.

Not a silo — a layer

The score follows you across BrickPicker.

BrickScore isn't a page you visit once. Tier-colored score dials appear on theme pages, every set detail page carries the full review module with the critics-versus-owners split, the highest-rated sets surface on your dashboard, and Brickfolio shows the average BrickScore of your own collection.

Filter any theme by score tier. Compare what critics say against what 5.7 million owner ratings say. Then check what the set is actually worth — the market data is one tab away, because it's the same platform.

The tier system
  • 90-100Must-Have
  • 80-89Highly Recommended
  • 70-79Recommended
  • 60-69Mixed Reviews
  • Below 60Skip It
Collector & Reseller plans

The Max Profit Opinion: where reviews meet market data.

For subscribers, every reviewed set also carries BrickPicker's house investment take: the reviewers' value and retirement claims, cross-checked against our own eBay sold comps, BrickLink pricing, appreciation history and retirement model. When a reviewer says "this will be a great investment," our data either backs it with numbers or politely disagrees. No review site can offer that, because no review site has the market engine underneath.

See pricing

BrickScore FAQ

What is a BrickScore?

A BrickScore is BrickPicker's 0-100 critic consensus for a LEGO set — the same idea as Metacritic for games, built for LEGO. Expert reviews are analyzed, scored and weighted by source reputability, then combined into one number. Owner ratings from real buyers are tracked separately and never blended in.

Is BrickScore free?

Yes. The full review library — scores, tiers, synthesized verdicts, expert breakdowns, owner ratings — is free for everyone. The one premium layer is the Max Profit Opinion, BrickPicker's house investment take on each reviewed set, included with Collector and Reseller plans.

Where do the reviews come from?

From the most trusted reviewers in the hobby: established YouTube builders, editorial institutions like Brickset and Rebrickable, and independent LEGO blogs, plus verified buyer reviews from LEGO.com, Amazon and Walmart. Every expert verdict is attributed by name and linked to the original review.

Can a set get a BrickScore from a single review?

No. A set needs at least two independent expert sources before a BrickScore is published, and the Must-Have tier (90+) requires at least three. One opinion is a summary, not a consensus.

Can I suggest a reviewer or site to include?

Yes — email [email protected] with a link. The bar is a track record of genuine, independent LEGO reviews. Sources that meet it get built into the library with attribution and links, the same as everyone else.

The verdict is finally in one place.

Check the consensus on your favorite set, your grail, or that one set everyone claims is overrated. No account required.