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LEGO Spider-Man vs. Oscorp (76324) Review: Street-Level Spidey

Patrick W.

808 pieces, eight Spider-Verse minifigures and a three-building street scene over 46cm tall. One of the best mid-tier Spider-Man sets.

Two kids playing with a big LEGO mech in the evening - official LEGO lifestyle photo

Photos used with permission. ©2026 The LEGO Group.

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🕸️ Introduction — Spidey, Down at Street Level

🦸 This review is part of our LEGO Marvel Hub – every Marvel set we have built and graded, in one place.

Spider-Man works best at street level — fire escapes, corner stores, the neighbourhood he actually swings through. The LEGO Marvel Spider-Man vs. Oscorp (76324) understands that completely. Instead of one hero figure or a single tower, it gives you a whole Spider-Verse street corner: three connected buildings, 808 pieces, and eight minifigures spanning heroes and villains alike.

After building and staging it, the verdict is a strong 8.5 out of 10. This is one of the better mid-tier Spider-Man sets in recent memory — a genuinely playable street scene with real display height and a figure roster that punches above the price. It is not a premium adult centrepiece, and it does not pretend to be; what it is, is a brilliant build-play-and-display set that hits the Spidey sweet spot.

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LEGO Marvel Spider-Man vs. Oscorp (76324) (opens in a new tab)

808 pieces and a three-building Spider-Verse street scene over 46cm tall, with eight minifigures, a motorbike, a glider and transparent action sticks. A great mid-tier Spidey set.

LEGO Marvel Spider-Man vs. Oscorp (76324)

For the Dadnology community, this is the kind of set that earns its keep twice: it is a great evening build for a dad, and a long-lived play set for a Spider-Man-obsessed kid. This review covers both angles honestly — the build, the display, the figures, and whether the footprint fits your shelf.

That spec list is the set’s pitch in miniature: a lot of figures, a lot of building, and genuine height. For a mid-tier price, it delivers an impressive amount of Spider-Verse in one box.

🛠️ Build Experience — Three Buildings, Three Acts

The build splits neatly into three connected structures, and the pacing benefits enormously from it. You construct Miles Morales’s apartment (with a jewelry store at street level), the Oscorp building, and Venom’s apartment (over a convenience store) as distinct sections that link into a single street corner. Each building has its own character, so the build never feels repetitive — finishing one and moving to the next gives the project a satisfying three-act rhythm.

The detailing is where it earns its keep. The street-level shopfronts — the jewelry store, the convenience store — are full of the small touches that make a LEGO city scene feel lived-in, and the apartments above them carry interior detail rather than being hollow facades. It is the kind of build that rewards a closer look once it is done, with little vignettes tucked into each floor.

The techniques stay accessible throughout, which is exactly right for a 10+ set that an adult and an older kid might build together. There is no arcane wizardry here — just solid, enjoyable building that produces a genuinely impressive structure for the piece count. The included motorbike and glider are quick, fun sub-builds that add play value and a bit of variety to the sequence.

🎨 Design & Display — Vertical Presence on a Mid-Tier Budget

Most mid-tier sets spread out flat; this one goes up. At over 46cm tall, the three-building street scene has real vertical presence — the kind of height you normally pay a lot more for. On a shelf it reads immediately as a slice of Spidey’s New York, with the buildings framing the action and the figures populating the windows, fire escapes and rooftops.

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LEGO Marvel Spider-Man vs. Mysterio: The Daily Bugle (76342) (opens in a new tab)

The companion 781-piece Spider-Verse Daily Bugle play set with seven minifigures and a Rhino mech — pair them for a Spidey street-scene shelf.

LEGO Marvel Spider-Man vs. Mysterio: The Daily Bugle (76342)

The transparent action sticks are the clever finishing touch. They let you pose Spider-Man and the others mid-swing or mid-air, frozen in a web-slinging arc, which transforms the display from a static streetscape into a dynamic action shot. It is a simple idea executed well, and it is what makes the finished set genuinely fun to look at rather than just neat.

The honest trade-off is footprint and tier. This is a play-and-display set, not a museum-grade centrepiece, so up close the detail is good rather than jaw-dropping. And while it goes up, it also goes wide — three connected buildings need a decent shelf width. But for the money, the combination of height, density and posability is hard to beat, and it slots beautifully alongside other Spider-Verse sets like the Mysterio Daily Bugle (76342) for a proper street-level shelf.

🦸 Minifigures — A Spider-Verse Lineup That Delivers

Eight minifigures is a generous roster for a mid-tier set, and the selection is smart. You get Spider-Man and Miles Morales (the two web-slingers everyone wants), Spider-Woman and Ghost-Spider to round out the heroes, and a villain bench of Eddie Brock, Norman Osborn, Kraven the Hunter and the Green Goblin. That is a genuine cross-section of the Spider-Verse — heroes, anti-heroes and rogues — in a single box.

The villain selection is what lifts it. Kraven and the Green Goblin are characters kids actually want to stage battles against, and having Norman Osborn alongside the Oscorp building ties the set together thematically. The glider gives the Goblin his signature ride, and the motorbike adds another mode of chase to the street scene. It all feeds the same fantasy: a running battle across a city block.

For collectors, this figure density is also where the value lives. Eight desirable Spider-Verse figures in one set, several of them not easy to find elsewhere, makes the price look a lot more reasonable than the piece count alone suggests. It is the roster, as much as the buildings, that earns the 8.5.

👨‍👧 Family Fit — Built to Be Played With

This is a set that genuinely wants to be played with, and that is a compliment. Rated 10+, the three buildings are robust enough for regular handling, and the whole thing is designed around staging battles — figures in windows, the Goblin on his glider, Spidey frozen mid-swing on an action stick. An older kid can lose hours to it, and that play value is a real part of the set’s worth.

For a dad-and-kid build, it is close to ideal. The three-building structure creates natural handoff points — one of you takes the jewelry store, the other the Oscorp tower — and the build is short enough to finish across an evening or two without losing momentum. Staging the finished street scene together is a proper shared payoff.

The toddler caveat applies as it does to any detailed set: the smallest hands will happily relocate minifigures and rearrange the shopfronts, so the finished display is best kept somewhere a four-year-old can admire but not redecorate. But unlike a delicate adult display piece, this set takes the rough-and-tumble of real play in its stride, which is exactly what you want from a Spider-Man set in a busy household.

💸 Value — Mid-Tier Money, More Than Mid-Tier Set

The value case here is genuinely strong. For a mid-tier price you get 808 pieces, three connected buildings with real vertical height, eight Spider-Verse minifigures and a set of action accessories that make it a joy to stage. Measured on figures-per-euro and on sheer display presence, it comfortably outperforms its tier.

The only thing holding it back from a 9 or higher is that it is, by design, a play-and-display set rather than a premium adult centrepiece — the detailing is very good rather than exceptional, and it does not have the showpiece finish of an 18+ set. But that is the correct trade for the price and audience. As one of the better mid-tier Spider-Man sets available, it is an easy recommendation and a clear 8.5.

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LEGO Marvel Spider-Man vs. Oscorp (76324) (opens in a new tab)

808 pieces and a three-building Spider-Verse street scene over 46cm tall, with eight minifigures, a motorbike, a glider and transparent action sticks. A great mid-tier Spidey set.

LEGO Marvel Spider-Man vs. Oscorp (76324)

Pros

  • Eight-strong Spider-Verse minifigure roster spanning heroes and villains, including Miles and Ghost-Spider
  • Three connected buildings give genuine vertical display height for a mid-tier set
  • Transparent action sticks make dynamic mid-air web poses easy to stage
  • Robust, playable design that doubles as a long-lived play set

Cons

  • A play-and-display street scene rather than a premium adult centrepiece
  • Three-building footprint needs a decent shelf width

Watch it: Oscorp drives the plot of The Amazing Spider-Man.

🗣️ Conclusion: Street-Level Spidey, Done Right

After building and staging the LEGO Spider-Man vs. Oscorp (76324), the verdict is a strong 8.5 out of 10. It is one of the better mid-tier Spider-Man sets in recent memory: a genuinely playable, genuinely displayable street scene with a figure roster that punches above its price.

If you want a Spider-Man set that works as both an evening build for you and a long-lived play set for the kids, this is an easy yes. The eight figures, the vertical height and the action staging make it feel like more set than the price suggests. Pair it with the Mysterio Daily Bugle (76342) for a full Spider-Verse street-corner shelf.

The Final Word: A figure-rich, playable, surprisingly tall Spider-Verse street scene. One of the best mid-tier Spidey sets going. A clear 8.5.

📌 FAQ — Frequently Asked Questions

How many minifigures are in LEGO Spider-Man vs. Oscorp (76324)?

The set includes eight minifigures: Spider-Man, Spider-Woman, Miles Morales, Eddie Brock, Ghost-Spider, Norman Osborn, Kraven the Hunter and Green Goblin. It is one of the most figure-rich Spider-Man sets in its size class.

How big is the LEGO Spider-Man vs. Oscorp set?

Fully assembled it stands over 46cm high, 38cm wide and 11cm deep across three connected buildings. It has real vertical presence for a mid-tier set, so plan for a decent shelf width.

Is the LEGO Spider-Man vs. Oscorp (76324) worth it?

Yes. Eight strong minifigures, a genuinely playable three-building street scene and good display height make it one of the better mid-tier Spider-Man sets. A clear 8.5 out of 10.

Is the LEGO Spider-Man vs. Oscorp set good for kids?

Yes. It is rated 10+ and built for play as much as display. The transparent action sticks, motorbike and glider make staging web-slinging battles easy, and the buildings are robust enough for regular handling.

What buildings are in the LEGO Spider-Man vs. Oscorp set?

Three connected buildings: Miles Morales’s apartment with a jewelry store underneath, the Oscorp building, and Venom’s apartment with a convenience store below. Together they form a Spider-Verse street corner.

Patrick W.Founder & Editor

Father of two, keen nature & landscape photographer, and smart-home tinkerer based in rural Germany. Camera gear gets tested outdoors in real conditions — not on a studio bench — and the house runs on a home network more elaborate than it strictly needs to be. Everything reviewed here has to survive real family life: school runs, sticky fingers, and the odd toddler stress-test. Reviews are based on hands-on use, not press samples or sponsored placements. How we test →

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