LEGO Reveals Two Mandalorian Sets for August 2026 With an Offworld Sandcrawler and Imperial Remnant AT-AT - HYPEBRICKZ
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LEGO Reveals Two Mandalorian Sets for August 2026 With an Offworld Sandcrawler and Imperial Remnant AT-AT

LEGO Star Wars Imperial Remnant AT-AT with INT-4 75454

LEGO has pulled the curtain back on two new Star Wars sets tied to The Mandalorian corner of the galaxy, and both are aiming straight at fans who still want play-first builds with a lot of scene value. The newly revealed LEGO Star Wars Offworld Sandcrawler and Mudhorn (75453) and Imperial Remnant AT-AT with INT-4 (75454) are scheduled to arrive on August 1, 2026, with pre-orders already open through LEGO. Taken together, the pair feels like a deliberate two-part drop: one set revisits a defining early moment from The Mandalorian, while the other leans into the newer big-screen momentum around The Mandalorian and Grogu.

The headline set is probably 75454 Imperial Remnant AT-AT with INT-4, which The Brick Fan lists at 1,453 pieces for $159.99. It is built around a remixed Imperial walker rather than the classic trilogy version, and that difference matters. This is not just another gray AT-AT rolling through the release calendar. The model is based on the Imperial Remnant version seen in the newer Mandalorian story line, with a more rugged, patched-together look that suits the post-Empire setting. According to the reveal details, the set includes an opening cockpit, accessible side panels and hatches, poseable head and legs, two spring-loaded shooters, and room for minifigures in both the cockpit and cargo compartment. There is also an INT-4 flyer and a speeder bike packed into the play pattern, which makes the set feel less like a static display piece and more like a full action box.

Jay's Brick Blog adds useful context here, noting that the AT-AT set is rooted in an action sequence from The Mandalorian and Grogu and is designed to recreate Mando and Grogu's clash with an Imperial Remnant Warlord and Snowtroopers. That story framing gives the set a clear identity. Instead of relying only on the familiar silhouette of an AT-AT, LEGO is selling a specific scene and a specific era of Star Wars. For younger builders and collectors who like their sets to connect to a concrete moment on screen, that usually lands better than a more generic vehicle release.

LEGO Star Wars Offworld Sandcrawler and Mudhorn 75453

The companion set, 75453 Offworld Sandcrawler and Mudhorn, goes even deeper into The Mandalorian Season 1 and looks like the more character-heavy release of the two. The Brick Fan reports 1,683 pieces and a $199.99 price tag, with the build centered on the gray Offworld Sandcrawler used by the Jawas. LEGO has paired that vehicle with a posable Mudhorn and its egg, plus Grogu in a hoverpram and a lineup that includes The Mandalorian, Kuiil, and the Offworld Jawas. The feature set sounds strong for hands-on play: steering controlled from the rear, a front hatch that opens and closes, stud shooters, and an interior loaded with cargo boxes and droid parts. That combination should give the model a lot more shelf life than a set that only looks good from one angle.

What makes this one especially appealing is that it taps into one of the most memorable stretches of early Mandalorian storytelling. Before the franchise expanded outward again, those dusty frontier episodes built the identity that made Din Djarin and Grogu click with a wider audience. A Sandcrawler, Jawas, Kuiil, and a Mudhorn all in one box is a smart way to package that era. It also gives LEGO a very different texture from the AT-AT set. One is military and mechanical, the other is weird, lived-in, and a little more creature-driven.

LEGO Star Wars Imperial Remnant AT-AT with INT-4 75454 alternate view

On paper, the pricing puts these squarely in the serious fan zone without pushing into the largest collector-only tier. At $159.99 and $199.99, both sets sit in that middle band where LEGO expects family gifting, older kids, and adult Star Wars fans to overlap. The age recommendations split the difference too: 75454 is positioned for builders ages 10 and up, while 75453 moves to 14 and up. That suggests the AT-AT may be the easier all-around crowd pleaser, while the Sandcrawler could end up being the more rewarding choice for fans who want a denser build and a richer slice of Mandalorian world-building.

For Hypebrickz readers, the bigger takeaway is that LEGO still knows how to mine Star Wars for more than simple nostalgia. These are not random rehashes. They are two targeted releases built around characters and settings that still have momentum, and both seem to offer a healthy mix of minifigure appeal, recognizable scenes, and real play value. If you only have room in the budget for one August preorder, the Imperial Remnant AT-AT looks like the cleaner headline buy. But if you want the more distinctive set, the Offworld Sandcrawler and Mudhorn may be the one people remember longer.

Either way, LEGO's latest Mandalorian reveal gives the August 2026 lineup another strong talking point, and Star Wars fans now have two very different reasons to start planning shelf space.

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