The minifigures themselves are exquisitely detailed, and I mean that whole-heartedly.
This set though, makes full use of all the pieces and delivers, for the money, a more than acceptable vehicle.
It stands nearly three minifigures in height, which is really impressive considering some other tiny walkers we’ve gotten over the years, mostly in polybags or as little add-ons to larger sets in order to cheekily up the piece count and justify a higher price bracket (grrr). I say deceptively hefty because the box does not do the scale of the walker justice. Not an AT-ST even if you do stretch your imagination, but a deceptively hefty one all the same. The set is from, or rather loosely based on, Rogue One, and comes with four minifigures (two stormtroopers, snazzily updated, and two deathtroopers), weapons for all the figures, and a small Imperial walker.
So let’s get started with the army-building Imperial Trooper Battle Pack. Stud shooters… *shudders* (or should that be *studders*?)ĭespite having to colour code all six of my giant boxes of bricks that have accumulated over the years in order to put all the sets together (we still have the original instructions and boxes) I buy enough Lego sets these days, and ones of such a high quality compared to how simple the designs were back in the early 2000s, that I really should start reviewing some of them.