LEGO Avengers Endgame Final Battle (76323) Review
621 pieces, nine minifigures, a Thanos bigfig and eight glowing portals. The Avengers Assemble moment as a modular battle diorama.

Photos used with permission. Β©2026 The LEGO Group.
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π Introduction β The Moment a Whole Cinema Stood Up
π¦Έ This review is part of our LEGO Marvel Hub β every Marvel set we have built and graded, in one place.
There is one scene in the entire Infinity Saga that made grown adults cheer out loud in a dark room: the portals open, and everyone comes back. The LEGO Marvel Avengers: Endgame Final Battle (76323) is LEGOβs attempt to bottle that moment in 621 pieces β eight glowing portals, a Thanos big-figure, and a nine-strong roster of heroes arriving for the fight of their lives.
After building and staging it, the verdict is a confident 8 out of 10. This is a figure-driven set, and on that score it absolutely delivers: the roster is superb, the portals capture the moment, and the modular design means you can display it as one sweeping diorama or break it into scenes. The honest caveat β and there is one β is the price-to-piece ratio. But for the right fan, that is a footnote.
AdLEGO Marvel Avengers: Endgame Final Battle (76323) (opens in a new tab)
621 pieces, nine minifigures, a Thanos bigfig and eight portals. A modular diorama of the Avengers Assemble moment that splits into scenes or connects into one display.

For the Dadnology community, this is a set you buy with your heart as much as your head, and that is fine. Some LEGO sets are about engineering; this one is about a feeling. This review is honest about both sides: what you are genuinely getting, and what you are really paying for.
That spec sheet tells the real story: this is a set sold on its figures and its moment, not its brick count. Going in with that expectation is the key to enjoying it for exactly what it is.
π οΈ Build Experience β Modular By Design
The build is approachable and genuinely clever in how it is structured. Rather than one monolithic model, you assemble a series of connected modules β portal arches, terrain sections, and the supersized Ant-Man mech β that snap together into a single diorama or stand alone as separate scenes. It is the kind of build that an adult can knock out across an evening or two, and that an older kid can tackle alongside you with real satisfaction.
The portals are the engineering highlight. Getting that swirling, energy-ring look in brick is no small ask, and LEGO solves it with curved elements and trans-coloured pieces that read instantly as Doctor Strangeβs sorcery. Five full-size portals plus three smaller ones give you a real sense of scale to the arrival β this is not one token archway, it is a wave of them.
The supersized Ant-Man mech is the other standout build. It adds a hit of size and play value to a set otherwise driven by standard figures, and it is a fun, characterful sub-build in its own right. Across the whole set the techniques stay accessible β this is not a set that demands AFOL-level patience β which is exactly right for something pitched at play as much as display.
π¨ Design & Display β One Diorama or Many Scenes
The modular structure is the setβs smartest design decision, because it solves the eternal display-versus-play tension. Connect every module and you have a sweeping portals diorama that anchors a shelf and tells the whole story at a glance. Separate them and each portal becomes its own staging area for a battle scene. Few sets give you both options this cleanly.
AdLEGO Marvel Hulkbuster (76210) (opens in a new tab)
The 4,049-piece, 52cm Age of Ultron Hulkbuster β the premium Iron-armour step up from the Endgame diorama.

As a display piece it reads well from a distance thanks to the trans-coloured portal rings, which catch light and draw the eye. Up close, the figure-staging is where it shines β every hero has a place, and the Thanos big-figure looms over the scene with genuine menace. A warm light behind the portals lifts the whole thing into something close to cinematic. It is a set that rewards a bit of staging effort.
The trade-off to be honest about is footprint versus density. Fully connected, the diorama spreads wide rather than tall, so it wants a horizontal surface. And because the value is in the figures rather than a towering structure, it does not have the sheer architectural presence of a skyscraper set. What it has instead is narrative β and for the Avengers Assemble moment, narrative is exactly the point.
π¦Έ Minifigures β The Real Reason to Buy
Nine minifigures plus a Thanos big-figure is a genuinely generous roster, and it is the heart of the setβs appeal. Captain America with his damaged shield (the I can do this all day image), Iron Man MK85, Ant-Man, Scarlet Witch, Doctor Strange, Iron Spider, Black Panther, Falcon, and a Chitauri foot-soldier for the army β the lineup reads like a greatest-hits of the final battle. The prints are expressive and the selection is smart, covering heroes fans actually want.
The Thanos big-figure is the anchor. A standard minifigure Thanos would have undercut the whole moment; the bigfig gives the scene a proper villain with weight and presence, and it is the piece that makes the diorama feel like a confrontation rather than a group photo. Staging the heroes pouring through the portals toward him is exactly the play-and-display fantasy this set is built to deliver.
This density is also what justifies the price for the people who will love it most. If you have ever wanted a single box that hands you most of the Endgame final-battle cast in one go, this is it β and that convenience has real value beyond the piece count.
π¨βπ§ Family Fit β Play and Display in One Box
This is one of the more genuinely family-friendly sets in the Marvel range. Rated 10+, it is robust enough for play and flexible enough that an older kid can spend hours restaging the battle, swapping which heroes charge through which portal, and pitting the roster against the Thanos bigfig. The modular sections survive handling far better than a delicate display tower would.
For a dad-and-kid build, it is close to ideal: the modules create natural handoff points, the build is short enough to finish in a sitting or two, and the payoff β a populated battle diorama β is immediately satisfying. Younger children will want to grab the figures, which is fine for the figures themselves, though the portals are best kept on a shelf where small hands cannot reconfigure them into abstract art.
The nicest thing about it is that it grows with the household. It works as a play set now and quietly graduates to a display piece later, when the kids have moved on and the diorama settles permanently onto a shelf as a memento of the moment that defined a decade of Marvel.
πΈ Value β Paying for the Moment
Here is the honest part. At around $99 for 621 pieces, the Endgame Final Battle is not a price-per-brick bargain. You are paying for the licensed roster β nine minifigures and a Thanos bigfig β and for the moment it recreates, not for raw element count. If your value calculus is strictly pieces-per-euro, this set will look expensive, and that is a fair criticism.
But that is the wrong lens for this particular set. What you are really buying is a one-box recreation of the most cheered scene in the Infinity Saga, with most of the cast included and a modular design that displays beautifully. For a Marvel fan, that combination is worth the premium. Just go in clear-eyed: this is heart money, not head money, and it is a strong 8 because it delivers exactly what it promises to the fans who want it.
AdLEGO Marvel Avengers: Endgame Final Battle (76323) (opens in a new tab)
621 pieces, nine minifigures, a Thanos bigfig and eight portals. A modular diorama of the Avengers Assemble moment that splits into scenes or connects into one display.

Pros
- Outstanding nine-minifigure roster plus a Thanos big-figure β most of the final-battle cast in one box
- Five full-size and three small portals capture the Avengers Assemble moment convincingly
- Modular design splits into scenes or connects into one sweeping diorama
- Approachable build that works as both a play set and a display piece
Cons
- $99 for 621 pieces is figure-driven pricing, not brick-count value
- Spreads wide rather than tall β lacks the architectural presence of a skyscraper set
Watch it: this is the climax of Avengers: Endgame β the biggest battle the MCU ever staged.
π£οΈ Conclusion: The Moment, In a Box
After building and staging the LEGO Avengers: Endgame Final Battle (76323), the verdict is a confident 8 out of 10. This is a set that knows exactly what it is: a figure-rich, modular recreation of the most beloved moment in the Infinity Saga, and it nails the brief.
If you love the Avengers Assemble scene and want most of the cast plus a Thanos bigfig in one box, buy it and enjoy it for what it is. If you are hunting pure brick value, the per-piece price will give you pause β and that is fair. For everyone else, the roster and the portals carry the day. Pair it with a premium Iron-armour piece like the Hulkbuster (76210) and you have both the moment and the muscle.
The Final Word: The Avengers Assemble moment, faithfully bottled. Figure-driven pricing, but a joy for the fans. A strong 8.
π FAQ β Frequently Asked Questions
How many minifigures are in the LEGO Endgame Final Battle (76323)?
Is the LEGO Endgame Final Battle (76323) worth the price?
Can the LEGO Endgame Final Battle set be split into scenes?
Is the LEGO Endgame Final Battle suitable for kids?
Does the set include the Avengers Assemble portals?
Disclaimer: This review and its visuals were created with the help of AI. Some links may be affiliate links β we may earn a commission if you make a purchase, at no extra cost to you.
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