
Intro
LEGO has revealed another set tied to Marvel's First Steps era, and this one leans into character design more than big-screen spectacle. LEGO Marvel 76339 The Fantastic Four H.E.R.B.I.E. is a 747-piece build based on the lovable robotic assistant seen in The Fantastic Four: First Steps, with an August 1, 2026 release date already locked in. Brick Fanatics took a close look at how the model compares with the on-screen version, while Jay's Brick Blog confirmed the launch timing and pricing details for major regions. Taken together, the early picture is pretty clear: this is a display-forward Marvel set aimed at fans who want something smaller, weirder, and more personality-driven than the usual superhero vehicle or battle scene.
What's New
The headline feature is simple: H.E.R.B.I.E. gets the full standalone treatment. After last year's Fantastic Four vs. Galactus Construction Figure, LEGO has gone back to the same movie world and picked one of its most distinctive supporting characters for a dedicated model. According to Brick Fanatics, the set is designed as a brick-built recreation of the robot seen in the film, with a retro-futuristic look that closely follows the screen design. Jay's Brick Blog adds that the set arrives on August 1, 2026 and will retail for $74.99 in the US, alongside regional pricing of GBP 59.99, EUR 69.99, AU$119.99, and CAD$109.99.

Set Breakdown
At 747 pieces and more than 23 cm tall, the build appears to sit in a sweet spot between toy and shelf display. Brick Fanatics notes that the movie used a practical H.E.R.B.I.E. prop measuring more than 142 cm tall, so the LEGO version obviously shrinks the character down, but keeps the proportions and defining cues that matter most. The model stands on a sturdy black base, which should help it read more like a collectible display piece than a loose action build.
The robot's tape-recorder-inspired eyes are one of the strongest details. In the film, H.E.R.B.I.E. swaps the more classic comic-style look for twin reel-to-reel eyes, and the LEGO version mirrors that design with printed elements that rotate when the head moves. The arms are articulated at the shoulders and elbows, and each hand uses three claw-like fingers, letting the model hold its included accessories. Those accessories are small but fitting: a brick-built mug and a screwdriver, both reinforcing the idea that H.E.R.B.I.E. is more helper than fighter.
Another neat touch is hidden storage. The front panel can be removed to stash the accessories inside, and the build also includes the Fantastic Four logo on the chest plus H.E.R.B.I.E.'s name on the lower body. None of that sounds flashy on its own, but it gives the set the kind of character-specific attention that collectors usually want from a movie tie-in.
Key Highlights
- 747 pieces with a display height of over 23 cm.
- Release date of August 1, 2026, with pre-orders reportedly live now.
- Pricing listed at $74.99 / GBP 59.99 / EUR 69.99, with Jay's Brick Blog also citing AU and CAD pricing.
- Rotating printed eye elements that echo the movie's reel-to-reel design.
- Poseable arms, clawed hands, and included mug and screwdriver accessories.
- Hidden storage compartment built into the body.

Why This Matters
Superhero LEGO sets often default to vehicles, mechs, and battle scenes because those formats are easy to market and easy to play with. H.E.R.B.I.E. goes in a different direction. It is basically a character study in brick form, built around shape, expression, and movement rather than conflict. That makes it a more interesting release than it may seem at first glance. It also suggests LEGO is willing to give secondary movie characters room to stand on their own if the design language is strong enough.
For collectors who care about crossover design, this also lands in the same broader space as other display-oriented pop culture builds that blur toy and decor. If your taste runs toward sneaker-inspired brick builds, H.E.R.B.I.E. fits the same mindset: recognizable source material, clean presentation, and enough mechanical personality to make the model feel intentional on a shelf.
Bigger Picture
There is also a strategic angle here for LEGO Marvel. Fantastic Four is still a smaller corner of the superhero catalog compared with Spider-Man or the Avengers, so every set helps define what this subtheme can be. Last year's Galactus release gave the theme scale. H.E.R.B.I.E. gives it charm. If the line keeps going, that balance could matter. Fans respond well when a theme offers both event-sized centerpieces and smaller character-driven models that broaden the world.
Jay's Brick Blog raises one fair caveat: some buyers may wish the set included a minifigure-scale version of H.E.R.B.I.E. to pair more naturally with the Fantastic Four minifigures already released. That is an understandable criticism, especially for completionists. Even so, the current build seems positioned less as an add-on and more as a standalone display robot, and judged on those terms it looks unusually focused.
Suggested Build
This feels like a strong pick for Marvel fans, robot collectors, and anyone who likes character models with a bit of motion and a lot of visual identity. It may not be the loudest LEGO reveal of the week, but it is one of the more memorable ones. If you want a set that brings a specific movie design to life without turning into another generic action vignette, 76339 The Fantastic Four H.E.R.B.I.E. looks like a smart one to watch when it rolls out in August.