The 2026 FIFA World Cup is approaching, and one of the main buzzes is already unfolding not on stadiums but in toy stores. Small plastic bricks from the Danish company Lego are capturing the football world. They don't just release sets with a ball and goals. They create an entire universe where fans can assemble their dream stadium, sit mini-figures on the stands, and play out the World Cup final. Lego has become not just a toy but a powerful popularizer of football. Especially in a year when the whole world is looking at North America.
The first football set Lego released was in 2016. It was simple gates with a goalkeeper and a pair of players. But the real breakthrough came in 2020 when Lego concluded a long-term partnership with the UEFA Champions League. Sets with official symbols, figures of stars, and even mini-versions of famous stadiums appeared. By 2026, collaboration with football associations expanded.
The company has become a partner of the organizing committee of the 2026 World Cup in the United States, Canada, and Mexico. This means that exclusive constructors, timed to the World Cup, will appear on the shelves in North America and around the world. Lego doesn't just sell toys. It tells stories. About football, teams, competition, and unity. And it hits the target.
The most significant release of 2025-2026 was the "World Cup Final Stadium" constructor. It is an exact miniature of the "MetLife Stadium" in New York, where the main trophy will be raised on July 19. The set contains 2,800 pieces, a movable roof, realistic stands, and even lighting. The price is steep — about 300 dollars. But fans are sweeping it off the shelves for weeks.
Another hit is the "Fan Transport." A bus with an open top, packed with mini-figures with flags of participating countries. Inside — plastic smoke bombs, drums, and megaphones. For children, it's a way to feel the carnival atmosphere without leaving home.
Lego also released the "Classic Matches" series. Boxes where you can assemble scenes from legendary finals: Zidane's rescue in 1998, Iniesta's goal in 2010, Messi's tears in 2014, and Messi's triumph in 2022. These are not just toys, but lessons in the history of football.
One of the main innovations is the "Mini-Figures of Football Legends" series. In 2026, Lego released sets with players from 32 participating countries. Kylian Mbappé, Lionel Messi, Cristiano Ronaldo (yes, he is still playing for Portugal), Erling Håland, Vinícius Júnior. Each figure has a unique hairstyle, uniform, and even a distinctive pose. Mbappé — crossed arms on the chest, Messi — pointing to the sky, Ronaldo — in a siu pose.
The figures are sold in blind bags for 5-10 dollars. Not only children, but adults are buying them in boxes, dreaming of collecting the entire collection. This has given rise to an entire subculture of exchange and trade. Videos of unboxing with millions of views are going viral on social media. Lego genially uses the collection mechanism to keep the audience engaged.
There's also a bonus figure of a referee with a VAR monitor and a tiny red plastic cardboard. Details that bring a smile to your face.
Lego doesn't limit itself to plastic. In 2025, the game "Lego Football Champions 2026" was released for all popular platforms. It's an arcade football where players control mini-figures that run on the field, make shots, and celebrate goals with funny animations. The game became a hit among children and family audiences. It's simple, bright, and doesn't require months of learning to control like EA Sports simulators.
There's a "World Cup 2026 Championship" mode in the game where you can choose any of the 48 real teams and lead them to the title. The stadiums are recreated in the style of Lego, but with recognizable features. Virtual postcard sets, in-game achievements, and the ability to compete with friends online. The game plays the same role as constructors: it involves children in football through a familiar and safe world of bricks.
The company has launched the "Lego Football Schools" program worldwide. As part of this program, special "Football Rules" sets are supplied to elementary schools. The set includes player figures, referees, a field with markings, and cards with descriptions of violations. Children act out situations: offside, penalty, yellow card for a foul.
The aim is that by 2026, more than 500,000 children around the world will learn about football rules through Lego. Especially important in countries where football is not the number one national sport. The United States, Canada, India, China. There Lego becomes a bridge between playing with a constructor and playing on the stadium.
Adult Lego collectors (AFOLs — adult fans of Lego) have created a whole movement of "Lego Football Fans." They build huge dioramas of football cities, recreate historical moments, shoot stop-motion films with plastic footballers. On YouTube channels of such enthusiasts, there are millions of subscribers.
In 2026, Lego football exhibitions will be held in the host cities of the World Cup — New York, Los Angeles, Mexico City, Toronto. There will be presented giant stadium models made of several hundred thousand pieces, full-size player figures, and interactive zones where any child can build their own ball or boot. These exhibitions are free and attract a huge number of families who may be thinking about attending a real football match for the first time.
Lego pays serious money for licenses. UEFA Champions League, FIFA, individual clubs ("Barcelona", "Real Madrid", "Manchester United", "Bayern Munich"). In 2026, licenses for the national teams of the United States, Canada, and Mexico were added. For Lego, this is a mutually beneficial partnership. They gain access to millions of fans, while FIFA and UEFA get cross-promotion among children who do not watch TV but love constructors. The economic effect is tangible. Sales of the football Lego series grew by 300 percent from 2024 to 2026. Football has become the second most popular theme for Lego after "Star Wars." And in North America, where the World Cup is taking place for the first time in 32 years, sales growth has exceeded all expectations. The company even expanded the factory in Mexico to meet the demand for sets with the World Cup logo.
Not everything is smooth. Environmentalists criticize Lego for using oil-based plastic. The company promises to switch to eco-friendly materials by 2030, but is not in a hurry. The prices for large sets are unaffordable for many families. 300 dollars for a stadium is a weekly salary in many countries. Lego justifies the complexity of licenses and high production costs, but there is a residue. In addition, some fans are complaining about the quality of new sets. They say that details fall out, figures break, stickers peel off. In the pursuit of volume, the company sometimes sacrifices quality control. But most buyers are still satisfied. The emotions from building a favorite stadium or celebrating a goal outweigh the minor flaws.
Lego has competitors. Mattel releases football sets with figures from the Mega Construx series. Hasbro — football transformers. But no one can repeat the success of the Danes. Lego's secret is in the system. One cube connects to another, and from the same pieces, you can assemble a stadium and a spaceship. This gives endless reconfigurability. Chinese knock-offs are cheaper, but the quality is poor. Children quickly get bored with clones and return to the original. In addition, Lego has invested huge amounts of money in creating football content: a Netflix cartoon about the adventures of a plastic player named Leo, who dreams of winning the World Cup; podcasts for parents; competitions for the best stadium construction. Competitors do not have such a budget.
The 2026 World Cup is likely to break viewing records. But without Lego, part of the audience — young children who do not understand the rules or cannot sit for 90 minutes — would have been left out. Lego gives them an entry ticket. A child builds a stadium, arranges figures, imitates a shot. Then he sees the same game on TV — and recognizes it, smiles. Then he goes with his parents to a real match. Then he starts playing soccer in the courtyard. Lego will not replace live football. But it creates a context, a history, an environment. Thanks to plastic bricks, football becomes closer, clearer, and more desirable for a new generation. And in this — the main popularizing role of Lego in 2026. Not sets, not figures, but the opportunity to touch the big game with small hands.
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