LEGO Marvel Ravager Jumpsuit Groot (76341) Review: A Joy on the Shelf
604 pieces, a 25cm poseable Groot in his red Ravager jumpsuit, plus a brick-built detonator. The Guardians display figure dads will love.

Photos used with permission. ©2026 The LEGO Group.
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🌱 Introduction — We Are Groot, On The Shelf
🦸 This review is part of our LEGO Marvel Hub – every Marvel set we have built and graded, in one place.
Some LEGO sets you buy because you need them on the shelf. Others you buy because you simply love the character, and the moment you see the box you already know it is coming home. The LEGO Marvel Ravager Jumpsuit Groot (76341) is firmly in the second camp. This is Groot from Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2 — the gangly teenage version in his red Ravager jumpsuit with that one enormous zipper running down the middle — rendered as a 604-piece, 25cm-tall poseable display figure. And I have a confession to make right at the top of this review: I adore it.
After building him over a couple of relaxed evenings, the verdict is an easy 9 out of 10. He is not LEGO’s biggest or most expensive display figure, and that is exactly why he sits a single notch below the absolute flagship builds. But for sheer charm-per-euro, very little in the 2026 Marvel wave touches him. Groot is one of the great modern Marvel characters, and LEGO captured his personality without resorting to a sticker or a printed face panel doing all the work.
AdLEGO Marvel Ravager Jumpsuit Groot (76341) (opens in a new tab)
A 604-piece, 25cm poseable Groot in his red Ravager jumpsuit, with a brick-built detonator side build. The Guardians of the Galaxy display figure dads will love.

For the Dadnology community, the question with a character display figure is rarely “is it good” — it is “does it earn its shelf space and survive the household.” Groot earns it. He has personality, he has a great little side build, and at an RRP of $59.99 / €59.99 / £54.99 he sits in the comfortable middle of LEGO’s licensed range rather than the budget-bruising top tier. This review covers the build, the display value, and the one honest caveat.
That spec sheet tells you most of what you need to know: this is a focused, single-figure build that prioritises articulation and likeness over piece-count bragging rights. At 604 pieces it is not a marathon, and that is the right call — Groot is about the payoff at the end, not the endurance of the build.
🪵 Build Experience — Branches, Not A Slog
The build is a genuinely pleasant few hours. You construct Groot from the feet up, and the internal skeleton work is where the cleverness lives: LEGO has engineered a frame that holds his weight and gives him a wide range of motion without the limbs sagging once he is standing. The bark-like surface detailing is then layered over that frame, and watching the texture come together is satisfying in the way the best brick-built figures always are — it is recognisably wood-grain even though no single piece is doing the heavy lifting.
The jumpsuit is the visual signature of this version of Groot, and LEGO has handled it well. The red of the suit reads correctly, the central zipper is captured cleanly, and the colour break between the suit and Groot’s bark-brown body is sharp rather than muddy. It is the detail that immediately tells anyone glancing at the shelf which Groot this is — not the tiny baby Groot, not the original-trilogy adult, but specifically the Vol. 2 teenager who would rather play his handheld game than help.
Pacing-wise, the build never drags. There are no repetitive sections that test your patience, and because the figure builds upward and outward you get a constant sense of progress. It is the kind of build I would happily hand part of to an older kid who knows the films — sorting the bags, building the detonator, helping with the limbs. More on that in the Family Fit section below.
🤸 Articulation & Design — Eyebrows Included
Here is where Groot goes from “nice” to “genuinely delightful.” He is poseable at the head, arms, legs and fingers — and, in a detail that made me laugh out loud, the eyebrows. You can adjust his expression. That is an absurd, wonderful piece of design effort for a buildable figure, and it is exactly the kind of thing that elevates a display piece from a static statue into something with personality you can dial in.
The articulated fingers deserve a specific callout. They let you pose Groot holding the detonator, pointing, or doing his trademark shrug, and they hold their position rather than flopping. Combined with the poseable limbs, this means you are not stuck with one fixed display pose forever — rearrange him on a quiet Sunday and he reads completely differently. For a figure that is going to live on your shelf for years, that flexibility matters more than it might sound.
AdLEGO Marvel Iron Man Mark 3 Collectors' Edition (76344) (opens in a new tab)
The standout 18+ brick-built Iron Man figure from the same 2026 Marvel wave — if you like character display builds, this is the premium step up.

Standing over 25cm tall, he has real presence too. He is tall enough to anchor a Guardians shelf next to smaller minifigure-scale sets without being so large that he demands a dedicated cabinet. The proportions are faithful to the lanky, slightly awkward teenage Groot rather than an idealised heroic stance, which is the correct creative choice — half the charm of this character is that he is a moody adolescent in a tree’s body.
💣 The Detonator Side Build — Pure Fan Service
The set throws in a brick-built explosive detonator as a side build, complete with proper buttons and levers, and it is a lovely touch. If you have seen Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2, you know exactly which scene this references — the one where baby Groot is repeatedly handed the wrong item while everyone yells the correct instructions at him with increasing panic. It is one of the funniest gags in the entire MCU, and having the detonator sitting beside the figure turns the display into a little visual punchline for anyone who gets the reference.
This is the sort of detail that separates a thoughtful licensed set from a lazy one. LEGO did not have to include it. The set would have sold fine as just the figure. But the detonator gives Groot something to interact with, gives the display a narrative hook, and rewards the fans who actually love this character rather than just buying the biggest box on the shelf. It is small, it is cheap to include, and it is exactly right.
👨👩👧 Family Fit — A Dad’s Shelf, A Kid’s Grin
Let’s be honest about what this is: once built, Groot is a display figure, and the fine articulation around the fingers and eyebrows is not built for a toddler’s enthusiastic grip. Rated 10+, he is happiest standing on a shelf where small hands cannot redecorate him. A curious four-year-old could pop an arm off in seconds, and the eyebrow articulation in particular is delicate.
That said, this is one of the more kid-friendly display figures in spirit, because Groot is a character kids genuinely love. An older child who knows the Guardians films will be thrilled by him, will want to pose him, and can absolutely get involved in the build — sorting bags, assembling the detonator, helping with the limbs. The shared build is part of the appeal here. Just establish the no-rough-handling rule once he is finished, the same way you would with any display piece.
For the dad who is the primary audience, Groot hits a sweet spot. He is nostalgic without being a serious budget commitment, he is quick enough to build in an evening or two, and he brings genuine joy to a shelf. He is the kind of set you build with a smile rather than a sense of obligation — and that counts for a lot.
💸 Value — Charm Per Euro
At $59.99 / €59.99 / £54.99 for 604 pieces, Groot sits in the sensible middle of LEGO’s licensed pricing. The price-per-piece is fair rather than exceptional, but that is the wrong lens for a character display figure — you are paying for the likeness, the articulation and the personality, not the raw brick weight. On that measure he is excellent value. There is simply nothing else on the shelf that gives you a 25cm, fully poseable, eyebrow-articulated Groot for this money.
AdLEGO Marvel Ravager Jumpsuit Groot (76341) (opens in a new tab)
A 604-piece, 25cm poseable Groot in his red Ravager jumpsuit, with a brick-built detonator side build. The Guardians of the Galaxy display figure dads will love.

If you want to step up to LEGO’s most premium character builds, the Iron Man Mark 3 Collectors’ Edition (76344) from the same 2026 wave is the obvious upgrade — larger, pricier, and aimed squarely at adult collectors. But Groot is not trying to compete with that. He is trying to be the most lovable figure on your shelf for a reasonable price, and at that he succeeds completely.
Pros
- Poseable down to the head, arms, legs, fingers and even the eyebrows — you can dial in his expression
- Captures the Vol. 2 Ravager-jumpsuit Groot with real charm and a faithful lanky-teenager silhouette
- Detonator side build is a perfect, funny nod to one of the MCU's best gags
- Sensible mid-range price for a 25cm display figure with this much personality
Cons
- A smaller character build than LEGO's flagship display figures, which is why it scores a notch below them
- Fine articulation and display focus mean he is not built for rough handling by young kids
Watch it: grown Groot wears this Ravager look by Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3.
🗣️ Conclusion: The Most Lovable Figure On The Shelf
After building and living with the LEGO Marvel Ravager Jumpsuit Groot (76341), the verdict is a happy, confident 9 out of 10. He is not the biggest or most expensive figure in the 2026 Marvel range, and that single fact is the only thing keeping him off a perfect score — at this smaller scale he simply cannot do what the flagship display figures do. But on charm, on personality, and on the sheer joy of having him on the shelf, very little touches him.
If you love the Guardians of the Galaxy films, this is an easy buy. Build him over a couple of evenings, pose him holding the detonator, set his eyebrows to “mildly annoyed,” and enjoy. If you specifically want a larger, collector-grade centrepiece, look at the Iron Man Mark 3 (76344) instead — but you will be missing out on the most characterful figure of the wave.
The Final Word: A smaller set than the flagships, but pound for pound the most joyful Marvel display figure of 2026. An easy, affectionate 9 out of 10.
📌 FAQ — Frequently Asked Questions
How tall is the LEGO Ravager Jumpsuit Groot (76341)?
Is the LEGO Ravager Jumpsuit Groot (76341) worth it?
What is the detonator side build in the Groot set?
Is the LEGO Groot set good for kids?
How does the Groot figure compare to the bigger LEGO Marvel display figures?
Disclaimer: This review and its visuals were created with the help of AI. Some links may be affiliate links – we may earn a commission if you make a purchase, at no extra cost to you.
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