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What each LEGO® Speed Champions set actually is.

Brand tells you who built the real car. Category tells you what the car does — race prototype, road-going hypercar, F1 single-seater, drag dragster, off-road truck. 9 categories across 106 sets.

9

Categories

106

Total sets

23

Largest (Formula 1)

0

Single-set categories

Sets per category

Bars show set count per category, split by era. Click any bar to jump to that category's full set list.

Category is the Speed Champions axis closest to motorsport's actual taxonomy. F1 cars carry the F1 category. Cars built for Le Mans GT-class racing carry endurance. Production hypercars carry hypercar. The labels do real work: an F1 car is a 1.6L turbo-V6 hybrid single-seater chasing a constructors title; a hypercar is a road-legal 1,000+ hp production car (or a track-only special derived from one); an endurance car is built for 24-hour-distance reliability and a regulation-defined performance window.

The line's distribution skews motorsport. Formula 1 is the largest at 23 sets, Hypercars (16), Endurance (15), Race Cars (10), Road Cars (10), American Muscle (8). The balance reflects what LEGO® has been able to license most easily — modern F1 has team-led merchandise programmes, hypercar manufacturers actively want their cars in toy and collectible form, endurance prototypes are a long-running motorsport category with photogenic shapes.

At the small end, several categories exist for a single set or a tight handful — rally, rally-rallycross, NASCAR, SUV-crossover, drag-strip. Those are the categories where Speed Champions has tested format extensions: Ken Block's Hoonicorn (rally-rallycross), the 2019 Camaro ZL1 NASCAR set, the dual-vehicle 76924 G63/SL63 (SUV-crossover). Whether they grow depends on whether the line keeps reaching beyond pure track-and-circuit racing.

The four largest categories

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