Lego has announced a collaboration with Netflix to release a series of One Piece Lego sets “coming soon.”

The One Piece collaboration was announced by Lego with a short teaser trailer, below, showing off Luffy’s iconic straw hat in Lego form. No release date was announced, but the “collection” will be revealed in the coming month, and it’s otherwise promised to release “soon.”

These sets will be based on the Netflix live adaptation of the beloved manga series, and not it directly or its anime. That being said, the Netflix show perfectly recreated myriad elements of the source material so any Lego versions should be fairly close to all the above.

One Piece fans are invited to “follow the action and embark on their own grand adventures with multiple new Lego sets, inspired by some of the most iconic scenes straight out of the East Blue,” Lego said.

“These sets will feature the main crew as seen in the show for the first time in Lego Minifigure form, transporting fans into the heart of the action featuring settings and scenes pulled straight from the screen.”

Netflix vice president of consumer products Josh Simon emphasized an attention to detail, too. “Through every detail of the design process, we’ve worked to meticulously create a collection of playsets that will give fans new ways to live out their own epic voyages into the Grand Line one special Lego brick at a time,” he said.

The live action One Piece adaptation premiered in 2023, while its second season is expected sometime in 2025. It will feature a number of new faces including Lera Abova as Nico Robin, Joe Manganiello as Crocodile, Charithra Chandran as Miss Wednesday, Katey Sagal as Dr. Kureha, Mark Harelik as Dr. Hiriluk, Sendhil Ramamurthy as Nefertari Cobra, Brendan Sean Murray as Brogy, Callum Kerr as Smoker, Camrus Johnson as Mr. 5, Clive Russell as Crocus, Daniel Lasker as Mr. 9, David Dastmalchian as Mr. 3, Jazzara Jaslyn as Miss Valentine, Julia Rehwald as Tashigi, Rob Colletti as Wapol, Ty Keogh as Dalton, and Werner Coetser as Dorry.

Jamie Lee Curtis, who was long expected to play Dr. Kureha after expressing interest herself and co-showrunner Matt Owens saying “at this point we’re writing for her,” won’t appear in Season 2 after all.

Ryan Dinsdale is an IGN freelance reporter. He’ll talk about The Witcher all day.

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