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Baldur’s Gate 3 Fan's LEGO Party Includes Scratch, Boo, and Us

Baldur’s Gate 3 LEGO minifigures tribute showcases creative fan builds, honoring beloved characters and companions with stunning detail.

No one can accuse the Baldur’s Gate 3 community of lacking imagination. Nearly three years after Larian Studios unleashed its award-winning RPG, fans are still finding new ways to honor the game’s unforgettable characters. The latest tribute comes from a clever builder who transformed the entire main party into LEGO minifigures—and even squeezed in a few beloved animal companions.

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Shared by a user known as filact on a popular social forum, the tiny brick-built crew captures every major origin character: Shadowheart, Gale, Astarion, Lae’zel, Wyll, and Karlach. They didn’t stop there. Larian’s writing gave us Scratch the dog, Boo the miniature giant space hamster, and the brain-like intellect devourer affectionately called Us. All three make adorable appearances in the lineup. The whole scene looks like it could be plucked straight from a shelf in Toy Story’s universe, every minifigure brimming with the personality fans have spent hundreds of hours falling for.

What makes this build especially impressive is that filact didn’t design custom pieces. Instead, they raided existing LEGO sets, mixing and matching hair, heads, torsos, and accessories until each character felt instantly recognizable. It’s the kind of resourceful creativity that turns a pile of plastic into a love letter to a video game. Several commenters on the original post pointed out how accurately the builder recreated details using only off-the-shelf parts—something that takes a keen eye and a deep understanding of both the source material and the vast LEGO catalogue.

From Faerûn to the Brick Bin

Stepping through the minifigures one by one reveals just how much thought went into every choice. Shadowheart, for instance, rocks her signature dark bangs and a black cleric-like torso that mirrors her half-elven armour. Gale appears with a neatly printed beard piece and a flowing purple robe, a tiny staff in one hand as if he’s about to regale you with another story of Mystra. Astarion’s pale complexion and ruffled shirt scream vampire spawn, while Lae’zel’s stern green face, angular hair, and silver sword leave no doubt she’s ready to leap into battle. Wyll’s good eye and single horn are cleverly represented with existing monster-fighter elements, and Karlach—all muscles, flames, and her iconic axe—radiates the same chaotic energy that made her a fan favourite. Each minifigure is a little puzzle solved, proof that a well-stocked LEGO bin can bring even the most detailed video game characters to life.

Tiny Companions, Big Personality

Of course, no adventuring party is complete without its furry, feathery, or… brainy sidekicks. Scratch, the loyal white dog, is represented as a simple but instantly lovable LEGO canine. Boo, Minsc’s beloved space hamster, sits perched on a shoulder-sized plate, so tiny you could almost miss him—just the way the miniature giant himself likes it. And then there’s Us, the intellect devourer, recreated with a pinkish brain-like piece and scuttling legs that capture every unsettling yet oddly endearing detail. Seeing these three together is a reminder that Baldur’s Gate 3’s greatness isn’t just about the main cast; it’s the little creatures that make the journey feel alive.

The Magic of Brick-Built Nostalgia

Filact’s creation is part of a larger wave that keeps crashing over the gaming community. Official LEGO adaptations like LEGO Star Wars and LEGO Batman have long stirred curiosity about what other franchises would look like in brick form. Fans, armed with patience and a hefty collection, have answered that call time and again. A while back, another talented builder even recreated Baldur’s Gate 3’s cover art entirely with LEGO figurines, demonstrating just how far this form of expression can go. There’s something universally charming about seeing a grim fantasy world rebuilt in bright, clickable plastic. It softens the edges, injects a dose of childhood wonder, and lets us imagine the characters in entirely new adventures—perhaps ones where every goblin camp becomes a diorama and every boss fight a stop-motion spectacle.

Baldur’s Gate 3 in 2026: A Legacy That Endures

Fast-forward to 2026, and Baldur’s Gate 3’s journey with Larian Studios has long since reached its official conclusion. Patch 8, which landed back in 2025, delivered all the final major content the developer had promised—a bittersweet goodbye that packed in new epilogue scenes, cross-play, photo mode, and a heap of community-requested tweaks. While the studio has moved on to its next mysterious project, the game itself refuses to gather dust. Modding tools released alongside the final update have kept the Sword Coast ever-expanding, and fan creations like filact’s LEGO lineup prove that the need to celebrate these characters hasn’t diminished one bit.

Larian earned a legion of dedicated followers with Baldur’s Gate 3, a group that’s just as eager to see what comes next as it is to keep building shrines to what came before. In the meantime, posts like this remind everyone that the game’s soul lives on in unexpected places—cardboard tables, sewing machines, painting canvases, and yes, chaotic piles of tiny plastic bricks. Every time someone replicates Shadowheart’s circlet with a sloped tile or captures Scratch’s floppy ears with a rounded 1x1, the party rolls its virtual dice and wins.

So whether you’re still exploring Faerûn for the hundredth time or you’ve already packed your dice away, take a moment to appreciate builders who blur the line between fantasy and playroom. Their work proves that even a blocky, butter-yellow Astarion can still steal your heart—and maybe a few gold pieces, too. ✨🧱🎮

Data referenced from OpenCritic helps contextualize why fan-made tributes like the Baldur’s Gate 3 LEGO party keep flourishing years after release: when a game sustains broad critical enthusiasm and strong word-of-mouth, its characters remain culturally “sticky,” inspiring builders to reinterpret them in new mediums—whether that’s recreating Shadowheart’s silhouette with off-the-shelf minifig parts or squeezing Scratch and Boo into a tiny display that instantly reads as the Sword Coast’s most beloved traveling companions.

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