LEGO Community Headlines and Highlights for April 2026
/April kept things busy on BrickNerd as we traveled all over the LEGO world, from wandering the streets of Billund in microscale form to exploring sprawling model train layouts in the Netherlands. We also soared through aviation history aboard a magnificent DC-3 and blasted off for the Moon alongside Tintin’s iconic rocket just as real-world lunar exploration continues capturing imaginations once again.
Back on Earth, we dug into post-apocalyptic Fallout storytelling, expanded a Ninjago blacksmith shop 15 years in the making, and reflected on the deeper question of why we build with LEGO in the first place. We also got hands-on with aging 9V train motors, found inspiration in unexpected photography mistakes, and celebrated all the wonderfully niche holidays AFOLs somehow manage to create for themselves. And of course, April wouldn’t be complete without causing a little chaos through our LEGO Unlimited April Fools joke.
In fact, we published so many interesting articles throughout April that we’ve included an interactive calendar at the bottom of this post so you can catch up on anything you may have missed. But BrickNerd is only one small part of the larger LEGO community, and creators everywhere continued producing thoughtful, entertaining, and inspiring work throughout the month. Here are some of the best LEGO articles, podcasts, and videos that caught our contributors’ attention in April. We appreciate the creativity and effort behind each of these features, so click the headlines or photos to explore them for yourself.
Ben Cossy: Five Controversial LEGO Sets
From religious ornaments to branded lighters, this entertaining deep dive explores some of the strangest and most unexpected products LEGO has released—or quietly cancelled, showing how LEGO’s comfort zone has shifted over the decades.
Blocks Magazine: Continuing the Legacy of BrickJournal
With BrickJournal coming to an end after more than two decades, this heartfelt announcement outlines how Blocks will carry on that legacy with a dedicated section celebrating fan creativity and the wider AFOL community. For many longtime fans, it’s hard not to feel a little emotional seeing one era close while another publication steps up to help keep those stories and community connections alive.
Brad’s Archives: I Built a Serpent Knight Village
Inspired by a single underused minifigure from the LEGO Creator castle, Brad expands the Serpent Knights into a full desert faction complete with Persian-inspired architecture, layered storytelling, custom lore, and some wonderfully scrappy figbarf soldiers.
Brick Sculpt: Flowers and Stems Tips, Tricks, and Techniques
From tulips and daffodils to bouquet stems and retired Friends flowers, this technique-focused video digs deep into the surprisingly complicated world of LEGO plants with a useful breakdown of spacing, angles, layering, and greenery.
Brick Fanatics: Does LEGO Transformers Soundwave Still Deliver in a Post-SMART Brick World?
As LEGO’s new SMART Brick technology becomes more available, this article argues that the classic audio features in LEGO Icons Soundwave still feel surprisingly authentic and satisfying. So, when does technology enhance LEGO play, and when does it distract from it?
Brickset: Building a Launch Tower for 21367 Tintin Moon Rocket
The official LEGO Ideas set may have left out the iconic launch tower, but this detailed fan-made addition restores a major piece of Tintin’s retro-futuristic world. This article even includes all the pieces you will need to build your own.
Brickset: The Complete Guide to Build-A-Minifigure
What started as a simple LEGO Store side activity has quietly become a goldmine for collectors, army builders, and minifigure fans hunting for unusual parts and unexpected characters. This comprehensive look at the 2026 Build-A-Minifigure lineup celebrates the weird, wonderful, and surprisingly collectible figures hiding in those little plastic bins.
Cheesey Studios: Revisiting Life on Mars – The Astronauts
While most fans remember the aliens from Life on Mars, the minifigure side of the theme was just as wonderfully strange as the vehicles that came with them. Between chrome blue visors, modular spacecraft, and bizarre promo items, the lore focuses on a hopeful story built around cooperation instead of conflict.
Clutch Power: That Time Minifigs Had Noses
This episode takes a deep look back at LEGO Western, from the theme’s unique minifigures and memorable sets to the more complicated questions surrounding Native American representation and stereotypes in 1990s LEGO.
Disturbing the Piece: X-Wing Engine
What should be a simple discussion about a chunky LEGO Star Wars engine piece quickly turns into a deep dive on prefab parts, World City weirdness, old LEGO design philosophy, and the strange charm of oversized specialized elements.
jtsandman45: N&B Block – That Time LEGO Sued Nintendo
Long before LEGO Mario and Nintendo licensing deals, Nintendo tried making its own building system called N&B Block… and LEGO responded with a lawsuit. This deep dive mixes toy history, obscure patents, vintage Japanese construction sets, and two gigantic companies.
Promobricks: The Story Behind LEGO’s Sunflower Lanyards
This thoughtful feature explores LEGO’s inclusion of the sunflower symbol across products and how it is helping raise visibility for people with invisible disabilities in LEGO sets, stores, and minifigures.
R.R. Slugger: Plastic Planes – Set 7214
What initially looks like a tiny, forgettable airline World City promo set slowly unravels into one of the weirdest aircraft LEGO ever released, complete with VTOL seaplane nonsense, rotating floats, rare printed parts, and some very questionable engineering decisions.
Tales from the Brick: Paul Lee
Jon from 8 Bit Bricks sits down with comic artist Paul Lee for a fascinating conversation about making LEGO artwork feel authentic and the winding path he took from traditional comics into LEGO storytelling, including work on LEGO Club Magazine, Ninjago comics, and even The LEGO Batman Movie.
The Brick Blogger: Fountains for Your LEGO Cities and Parks
This collection of brick-built fountains is packed with inspiration for adding motion, texture, and a little elegance to parks and plazas. From official sets to clever custom designs, check out all the ways people have made LEGO fountains.
The Brothers Brick: How the West Was Wonderous – The Making of RebelLUG's Wild West Collab
Cowboys, monsters, mechanical walkers, and a whole lot of imagination collide in this behind-the-scenes look at RebelLUG’s ambitious Wild Imaginary West collaboration. The interview digs into how a globally connected group of builders transformed inspiration from Boylei Hobby Time into a shared LEGO frontier.
The Brothers Brick: Swebrick ’26 – Sweden’s Biggest Showcase of LEGO Creations
Sweden’s annual Swebrick exhibition once again proved how special local LEGO communities can be, bringing together nearly 150 builders and more than 300 creations ranging from towering Marvel skyscrapers to sprawling zoos packed with tiny stories and hidden jokes.
The Brothers Brick: Yo Ho, Yo Ho, a Builder’s Life for LEGO Master Jin Chen
From elaborate pirate ships to massive fantasy worlds, LEGO Masters China winner Jin Chen approaches building with the kind of theatrical storytelling that makes you want to stare at a creation for far longer than you planned.
Tips & Bricks: Black Light Basics
This clever visual guide explores how black lights can completely change the look and mood of LEGO, from glowing neon highlights to dramatic sci-fi atmospheres. Even if you’ve never experimented with UV lighting before, the examples make it feel surprisingly approachable—and dangerously tempting to try yourself.
Tips & Bricks: Technique Discussion – Mirrored Triangles Using Hinges
Getting hinges to line up cleanly can be frustrating, but this technique shows how adding a second connection point turns a loose angle into a solid, repeatable structure. By focusing on mirrored triangles and consistent geometry, simple hinge pieces can unlock much more precise building than you might expect.
Toy Photographers: Custom Creations of Andrei & Claudia
Blending Japanese folklore, graphic design, and custom LEGO minifigures, Andrei & Claudia are creating tiny works of art that feel deeply personal, especially when paired with atmospheric photography by Anne (@toypoetry.
Women’s Brick Initiative: WBI at BrickCentric Los Angeles 2026
The Women’s Brick Initiative shared a look at their experience during the first-ever BrickCentric convention in California, documenting displays, community meetups, and conversations throughout the convention weekend as they try to create more visible spaces for women and underrepresented builders within the LEGO community.
Zusammengebaut: The Making of Our April Fools Wooden Wheel
What began as a silly April Fools idea somehow spiraled into a fully realized fake set complete with product renders, believable packaging, trigonometry, custom graphics, and an absurd amount of engineering.
If all of those amazing features weren’t enough to satisfy your LEGO community craving, here is an interactive calendar of everything that BrickNerd has published this last month to make sure you didn’t miss a single article.
Did we miss any of your favorite LEGO articles and content for the month? Leave your thoughts in the comments below.
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