The reveal that confirmed Zelda as a LEGO line, not a one-shot
LEGO's 77092 Great Deku Tree 2-in-1 launched in September 2024 as the first official Zelda LEGO set. At 2,500 pieces and approximately $300 MSRP, the Great Deku Tree was a statement release — LEGO's commitment to a Zelda-branded product demonstrated through a flagship-scale build rather than a test-case small set.
But a single set doesn't make a LEGO theme line. For Zelda to count as a real LEGO sub-category — in the way Star Wars, Pokemon, Harry Potter, or Mario do — LEGO needed to commit to a second and third set that extended the line's scope. The 15 months between the 77092 launch and any official word on a follow-up left collectors uncertain whether Zelda would expand or remain a one-off.
The 77093 Ocarina of Time – The Final Battle reveal ended that uncertainty. At 1,003 pieces with three minifigs, 77093 is meaningfully smaller than the Great Deku Tree but still a substantial adult-collector set. More importantly, it confirms a specific Nintendo-LEGO licensing trajectory: LEGO is treating Zelda as a multi-year product line, building out iconic Zelda scenes and characters across successive waves.
For the Zelda fan community — many of whom had been calling for LEGO Zelda product for over a decade before the 77092 launch — the 77093 reveal is the signal that LEGO is in this for more than one release cycle.
LEGO revealed 77093 Ocarina of Time – The Final Battle as the second Zelda set

Ocarina of Time – The Final Battle
1003 pieces, 3 minifigs. Ocarina of Time's final battle — Adult Link vs Ganondorf at Ganon's Castle.

What 1,003 pieces and three minifigs suggests
LEGO hasn't publicly disclosed the specific minifig lineup for 77093 at reveal time, but the three-minifig count combined with the "Final Battle" subject matter suggests a clear likely roster: Adult Link (in iconic Hero of Time green tunic, possibly with Master Sword and Hylian Shield accessories), Ganondorf (in pre-transformation human form, or possibly the Gerudo King armor design), and one of two third-figure candidates — Sheik (Zelda's princess-in-disguise identity from Ocarina of Time) or Navi (Link's fairy companion).
The specific third-figure identity will drive significant collector interest. A Sheik minifig would be a first — Sheik has appeared in every Zelda adjacent video game and Smash Bros. appearance since Ocarina of Time but has never been LEGO-ified. A Navi inclusion would be simpler structurally (she'd likely be a small transparent blue element rather than a proper minifig) but iconic enough to still count as memorable.
The piece count of 1,003 is significant. It positions 77093 as LEGO's second Zelda set at a price tier that's more accessible than the Great Deku Tree ($150-180 range is the common projection based on LEGO's piece-per-dollar patterns). That pricing strategy matters — if every Zelda set shipped at $300+ like the Great Deku Tree, the line would price itself into a collector-only niche. Launching the second set at a meaningfully lower price tier keeps Zelda accessible to the broader LEGO audience.
The Final Battle choice: right scene, right build opportunity
Ocarina of Time's final battle happens across multiple phases. Adult Link first fights Ganondorf atop a crumbling tower in Ganon's Castle, then pursues him through the collapsing castle as Ganondorf transforms into the boar-demon Ganon for the final confrontation on the castle grounds.
LEGO choosing this specific scene as the subject of 77093 gives the designers significant build opportunity. The collapsing tower aesthetic translates beautifully to LEGO architecture. A tall, modular-destructible tower is exactly the kind of LEGO build that photographs well, displays dramatically, and offers play-feature potential (the castle may literally collapse as part of the set's action function).
Compare this to other possible Ocarina of Time scene choices. The Deku Tree Sprout encounter would have been too small in scale. The Temple of Time would have been visually interesting but static. The Ganon boss fight on the castle grounds would have been dramatic but potentially too dark tonally for LEGO's style. The tower-battle scene is the sweet spot — visually iconic, scale-appropriate, and play-feature-rich.
Leaked imagery from the reveal (LEGO has officially disclosed package art and build thumbnails) suggests the tower structure takes approximately 70-80% of the 1,003 piece count, with Ganondorf's throne, various castle accessory builds, and the play features consuming the remainder. The tower itself is positioned for rotational/collapsing mechanics, though LEGO has not confirmed specifics at reveal.
How 77093 pairs with 77092 Great Deku Tree
The 77092 Great Deku Tree 2-in-1 delivered LEGO's Zelda launch: a 2,500-piece build split between Breath of the Wild / Tears of the Kingdom era Deku Tree and Ocarina of Time / A Link to the Past era Deku Tree. It represents the Kokiri Forest setting across Zelda continuity.
77093 pairs naturally with 77092 by occupying a complementary location — Ganon's Castle is the narrative anti-pole of the Deku Tree forest. Together, the two sets cover the good/evil geographic poles of the Ocarina of Time world: Kokiri Forest (peaceful, nature-focused, the Deku Tree) and Ganon's Castle (corrupted, architectural, the Final Battle).
A collector who owns both 77092 and 77093 essentially has a LEGO Ocarina of Time shelf-scale world. The scenes are geographically and narratively complementary. Minifig continuity (Young Link in 77092, Adult Link in 77093) tracks the game's temporal arc. Display-shelf positioning would naturally place Deku Tree on one end and Ganon's Castle on the other — the scale difference is meaningful (77092 is about 2.5x the piece count) but not so extreme that the display looks lopsided.
For fans building out a Zelda LEGO collection, this is the first pair of sets that actually functions as a coordinated display. Whatever LEGO ships as 77094, 77095, etc. will plug into a baseline two-set structure that already covers significant Zelda continuity.

Great Deku Tree 2-in-1
2500 pieces, 4 figs. The Great Deku Tree 2-in-1 — LEGO's first Zelda set, launched 2024.
Minifig economy and the Adult Link / Ganondorf premium
Star Wars LEGO collectors have long tracked minifig value as a core set purchase driver. The Zelda LEGO line is entering that same dynamic, and 77093 is the set that introduces it meaningfully.
Adult Link and Ganondorf are the two most-requested Zelda LEGO minifigs. 77092 Great Deku Tree included Young Link, but Adult Link — the Hero of Time in his recognizable green tunic and sword-wielding stance — is the character most fans associate with Zelda's brand identity. Similarly, Ganondorf in his human Gerudo King form is the iconic Zelda antagonist, a signature figure that anchors a villains-side display.
Acquiring both Adult Link and Ganondorf in a single set is the kind of minifig value that incentivizes purchase even for collectors who aren't sold on the specific build. Zelda collectors who own 77092 but don't especially need Ganon's Castle as a build will still likely purchase 77093 for the minifigs alone. That dynamic has driven Star Wars battle-pack economics for years, and it now applies to Zelda.
Expected secondary-market behavior for the 77093 minifigs specifically: Adult Link and Ganondorf will likely track as among the higher-valued Zelda LEGO minifigs across the first few years of the sub-line. If a specific fan specifically doesn't want the build but wants the minifigs, the secondary-market parts-out value will still approximate the MSRP of the set itself.
What the reveal tells us about future Zelda sets
Reading LEGO's strategic cadence, 77093 reveals a few things about how the Zelda sub-line is being developed.
First: LEGO is confident enough in Zelda to release a second set within 18 months of the launch. That pacing matches Star Wars LEGO's early days (multiple sets in rapid succession after the 1999 theme launch) rather than slower-cadence themes that ship single sets per year.
Second: LEGO is drawing from Ocarina of Time specifically rather than only from the current Breath of the Wild / Tears of the Kingdom era. This suggests LEGO's Zelda licensing covers the full Zelda catalog — not just the current Switch-generation games. Future sets may reasonably draw from Wind Waker, Twilight Princess, Skyward Sword, or the Zelda animated series.
Third: the scene-focused build approach (Ganon's Castle Final Battle as a specific moment) positions future Zelda sets to each capture iconic scenes. Likely candidates for future Zelda releases: the Temple of Time, Death Mountain, Hyrule Castle, a boss fight (Majora's Mask Skull Kid, a Ganon transformation), or a character-focused build like Epona + Adult Link, or a Sheikah Slate / Master Sword display piece.
Fourth: LEGO's broader strategy across 2026 for Nintendo-licensed themes (Zelda, Mario, Pokemon, potentially future lines) is clearly expanding. Zelda getting a proper second set signals the Nintendo-LEGO partnership is entering a mature phase where both companies are willing to commit to long-term product pipelines.
Short version: 77093 matters beyond the build
Taken in isolation, 77093 Ocarina of Time – The Final Battle is a good LEGO Zelda set: 1,003 pieces, three minifigs including Adult Link and Ganondorf, scene-focused play-feature build of one of gaming's most iconic encounters. For the build and the minifigs alone, it's a clean recommendation for Zelda fans and LEGO collectors.
Taken in context, 77093 matters more. It's the set that confirms LEGO is serious about Zelda as a long-term product line, not a one-time licensing experiment. It delivers the Adult Link and Ganondorf minifigs fans have been asking for. It pairs with 77092 Great Deku Tree for the first coordinated Zelda LEGO display. And it signals LEGO's willingness to cover the full Zelda back-catalog rather than only the current game generation.
For Zelda LEGO fans who were uncertain after the 77092 launch whether more was coming, 77093 is the answer. More is coming. The Zelda LEGO era is real.

