The two-set state of LEGO Zelda retail
LEGO's Zelda sub-line is currently two sets deep. 77092 Great Deku Tree 2-in-1 launched in September 2024 and has remained continuously available since. 77093 Ocarina of Time – The Final Battle launched in early 2026 and has had strong, stable stock through Q1 2026. Neither set has entered the panic-buy sellout territory that defined, for example, the Pokemon launches earlier in 2026.
The practical implication: Zelda LEGO is a "buy when ready" situation rather than a "buy now or miss out" situation. Both sets are reliably in stock at multiple retailers, pricing is competitive, and no regional exclusivity limits access to standard markets. This is genuinely reassuring news for collectors who had seen other LEGO launches in 2026 become scarcity-driven.
What remains to navigate is where to buy each set for best value. Across LEGO.com, Amazon, Target, Walmart, and regional international retailers, pricing and availability differ enough that informed shopping saves real money. The following sections walk through each channel.
LEGO.com is the primary authorized retailer for 77092 and 77093

Ocarina of Time – The Final Battle
1003 pieces. 77093 Ocarina of Time – The Final Battle. $149.99 MSRP at LEGO.com.

Great Deku Tree 2-in-1
2500 pieces. 77092 Great Deku Tree 2-in-1. $299.99 MSRP, continuously available since 2024.

LEGO.com — the primary authorized channel
LEGO.com (lego.com in the US, lego.com/en-gb/ in UK, and region-specific domains globally) is LEGO's direct retail channel. It's where both 77092 and 77093 are sold at official MSRP without discount, and where LEGO's most robust post-purchase support applies.
Current LEGO.com pricing (Q1 2026): 77092 Great Deku Tree at $299.99 US / £259.99 UK / €299.99 EU. 77093 Ocarina of Time at $149.99 US / £129.99 UK / €149.99 EU.
The specific advantages of LEGO.com: (1) VIP points accumulation — approximately 10% value back on every Zelda purchase through LEGO's loyalty program, redeemable against future LEGO sets. (2) Gift-with-purchase promotions — LEGO periodically adds bonus Zelda-themed minifig or small-set gifts at specific spend thresholds. (3) Guaranteed authenticity — the LEGO.com supply chain delivers factory-sealed boxes with no risk of damaged resale inventory. (4) Early access to new Zelda sets when they launch — LEGO.com typically gets new sets 1-2 weeks before third-party retailers.
The disadvantages: (1) LEGO.com almost never discounts their own MSRP on Zelda sets. (2) Shipping costs can be non-trivial for single-set orders (typically free shipping applies only above $35-50 depending on region). (3) Physical inventory verification is impossible — you can't see the actual box before ordering.
Amazon — typically the best discounted price
Amazon.com (and international variants) carries both 77092 and 77093. Amazon's pricing tends to sit 5-15% below LEGO.com MSRP at baseline, with periodic deeper discounts during Prime Days, holiday events, and occasional off-season sales.
Current Amazon pricing (Q1 2026, approximate): 77092 Great Deku Tree at $259-279 (roughly 10-15% off MSRP). 77093 Ocarina of Time at $129-139 (roughly 10-15% off MSRP). Both sets are typically Prime-eligible with free 2-day shipping for Prime members.
Amazon's advantages: (1) Consistent small discount below LEGO.com MSRP. (2) Prime shipping speed. (3) Easy returns within the Amazon ecosystem. (4) Competitive marketplace sellers occasionally offer deeper discounts (though sealed-box authenticity should be verified).
Amazon's disadvantages: (1) No VIP points accumulation (lost long-term LEGO value). (2) No gift-with-purchase promotions. (3) Some listings (particularly marketplace sellers) have shipped damaged or opened boxes. (4) No early access to new Zelda sets — Amazon typically stocks 1-3 weeks after LEGO.com.
Recommendation: for one-shot purchases where long-term LEGO.com VIP accumulation doesn't matter, Amazon generally wins on total cost. For ongoing LEGO collectors, LEGO.com's VIP points often amortize the price gap over multiple purchases.
Target and Walmart — physical retail for US buyers
Target and Walmart in the US carry LEGO Zelda sets in-store and online. Physical availability varies by location (larger stores in higher-volume markets carry Zelda consistently; smaller markets have less predictable stock).
Pricing at Target and Walmart typically matches MSRP with occasional discount promotions during back-to-school, Black Friday, and holiday cycles. Target's RedCard 5% discount stacks with any promotional pricing, making Target competitive for RedCard holders. Walmart's pricing is generally competitive but doesn't have a direct loyalty-program equivalent.
Advantages of physical retail: (1) See the box before buying. (2) Avoid shipping costs. (3) Immediate in-hand delivery. (4) Easy return if the box is damaged or mispackaged. (5) Occasional clearance discounts when specific sets rotate out of store inventory.
Disadvantages: (1) Inconsistent stock — Zelda sets can be out of stock for extended periods at smaller stores. (2) Physical shelf-pull damage (some boxes show shelf-wear from handling). (3) No online-only discounting — physical retail pricing is typically at MSRP. (4) Manual effort to check stock across multiple locations.
Recommendation: use Target or Walmart for impulse buys when you see a set in-store at the right price. For planned purchases, LEGO.com or Amazon typically deliver better total value.
International availability and regional pricing considerations
LEGO's Zelda line is globally distributed through LEGO's standard international structure. Availability across major markets:
United Kingdom: LEGO.com/en-gb/, Amazon.co.uk, Smyths Toys, John Lewis. UK MSRP is typically 10-15% higher than US pricing on a pound-for-dollar basis due to VAT inclusion.
European Union (major markets Germany, France, Italy, Spain): LEGO.com regional domains, Amazon.de/.fr/.it/.es, regional LEGO Certified Stores. EU pricing includes VAT and is typically 15-20% higher than US pricing on a euro-for-dollar basis.
Canada: LEGO.com/en-ca/, Amazon.ca, Indigo, Mastermind Toys, Walmart Canada. Canadian pricing tracks US pricing closely, though exchange rate fluctuations affect the exact conversion.
Australia and New Zealand: LEGO.com/en-au/, Amazon.com.au, Target Australia, Kmart Australia, Big W. Australian pricing is typically 20-30% higher than US pricing due to regional distribution costs.
Japan: LEGO.com/ja-jp/, Amazon.co.jp, major Japanese toy retailers. Japan-specific considerations: some LEGO Zelda sets may have delayed launch windows relative to US release, particularly for sets with sub-line expansions.
For international buyers comparing options: local LEGO.com and local Amazon are almost always the right channels. Importing from US retailers introduces shipping costs and potential customs fees that eliminate any pricing advantages.
Timing: when to buy for best value
For collectors with flexibility on purchase timing, specific windows offer better value:
May the 4th (Star Wars Day) promotions: despite being Star Wars branded, LEGO.com typically runs site-wide VIP double-points promotions during this window that apply to Zelda sets. Late April / early May is a strong buying window.
Summer LEGO promotional events: LEGO.com typically runs mid-year promotional campaigns in June-July. Zelda sets have been included in past promotional cycles.
Amazon Prime Day (typically mid-July): Amazon's annual Prime-member sale frequently includes LEGO sets at 20-30% off MSRP. 77092 and 77093 are both likely candidates for Prime Day discounting.
Black Friday / Cyber Monday (late November): the deepest discounts of the year typically cluster here. Both Amazon and LEGO.com offer significant Zelda-inclusive promotions.
Holiday season (December): gift-giving drives demand, but LEGO.com maintains VIP points promotions and gift-with-purchase thresholds through the holiday window. Expect steady availability but limited incremental discount depth.
Less optimal buying windows: mid-February through mid-April (LEGO's slowest promotional period). Late August through early October (back-to-school retail priorities don't include LEGO adult-collector focus).
Practical summary: if you can wait, Prime Day in July and Black Friday in late November are the two highest-value windows annually. If you can't wait, LEGO.com VIP promotions during May the 4th and the summer cycle are the best LEGO-direct alternatives.
Short answer: where should you buy 77092 and 77093 right now
If you want the fastest, simplest path: LEGO.com direct. Both sets are in stock, VIP points accumulate, customer service is solid, and you're buying from the original source.
If you want the best price in the US: Amazon. Both sets are Prime-eligible at roughly 10-15% off MSRP as of Q1 2026, with free 2-day shipping for Prime members.
If you want to see the box in-hand before buying: Target (especially for RedCard holders) or Walmart, checking physical inventory at larger stores in your area.
If you want to wait for the best possible price: set price alerts on Amazon for both sets and wait for Prime Day (mid-July) or Black Friday (late November). Historical pattern suggests 20-30% off MSRP is achievable in those windows.
Both LEGO Zelda sets are currently accessible without scarcity risk. The line is expanding (77093 launched as confirmed second set), the buying infrastructure is stable, and collectors have time to make informed purchase decisions rather than needing to panic-buy at launch.
The Zelda LEGO era is in its early-but-real phase. Welcome to it.

