The Lamborghini two-pack is the most generous Speed Champions set in the 2025 lineup. At 607 pieces split across two complete supercars, you are getting a build session that comfortably fills 90 minutes to two hours - roughly double the time of a single-car Speed Champions set. The Revuelto and the Huracan STO are built sequentially from separate bag groups, and the contrast between the two builds is where the real satisfaction lives. The Revuelto is Lamborghini's hybrid future: angular, aggressive, and packed with sculpted surface detail. The Huracan STO is the naturally aspirated farewell: lighter, more focused, and defined by its massive rear wing and track-oriented aerodynamics.
The Revuelto build comes first in most builders' hands and sets a high bar. The angular bodywork uses a combination of wedge plates, slope elements, and tile pieces that capture the Revuelto's dramatic Y-shaped design language. Every surface is angled, every line is deliberate, and the build progression rewards attention as each new panel adds another facet to the car's complex geometry. The color work depends on which livery version you are building - LEGO has used a striking color combination that reads as unmistakably Lamborghini from the first few pieces.
The Huracan STO follows with a different character entirely. Where the Revuelto is broad and complex, the STO is compact and aggressive - a track weapon with a massive rear wing that dominates the rear profile. The wing assembly is the build highlight: a multi-element construction that captures the STO's signature aerodynamic feature at 8-wide scale. The rear diffuser area is more detailed than most Speed Champions cars, reflecting the STO's real-world focus on downforce generation. Building both cars back to back creates a satisfying narrative arc: the old guard and the new, the last V10 and the first hybrid, displayed side by side as a generational statement.
The emotional resonance of building both cars in one session should not be understated. The Huracan STO represents the end of an era - the final naturally aspirated Lamborghini V10, a powertrain philosophy that defined the brand for decades. The Revuelto represents what comes next - hybrid power, new architecture, the future of Sant'Agata Bolognese. Building them sequentially gives you a tactile understanding of that generational shift. The STO feels leaner, more focused, more mechanically pure. The Revuelto feels broader, more complex, more technologically ambitious. That contrast is not something you appreciate from photographs alone - it emerges through the act of building, and it transforms a two-pack purchase into something approaching automotive storytelling through bricks.
Two cars means twice the technique content, and the Lamborghini pair delivers on that promise. The Revuelto's angular bodywork requires compound angling that pushes the 8-wide format to its limits. The Y-shaped headlight signature is suggested through clever tile placement on angled surfaces, creating a visual detail that reads correctly at arm's length despite being only a few studs wide. The side intake geometry uses recessed plate assemblies that create shadow lines in the bodywork, adding visual depth that flat surfaces cannot achieve. For builders studying how to create angular, faceted supercar bodies at this scale, the Revuelto is a masterclass.
The Huracan STO contributes different lessons. The massive rear wing uses a bracket-mounted plate assembly that extends well beyond the body, creating the exaggerated aero profile that defines the real car. The wing endplates are separate elements that frame the main plane, adding structural complexity that most Speed Champions rear wings simplify away. The front splitter extends further forward than typical Speed Champions cars, and the roof scoop is suggested through a raised element behind the cockpit. Comparing the two cars' approach to aerodynamic surfaces teaches how LEGO's designers adapt technique to match each car's visual priorities: the Revuelto emphasizes body sculpture, the STO emphasizes functional aero hardware.
The side profile construction across both cars offers an additional lesson in how LEGO handles different roofline philosophies within the same format. The Revuelto's roofline flows smoothly from the A-pillar through to the rear deck in a continuous curve - achieved through a sequence of slope elements that create a visual line LEGO's designers clearly prioritized. The STO's roofline is more abrupt, dropping sharply behind the cockpit to create the aggressive, almost chopped profile that the track-focused Huracan demands. Comparing how these two very different roof treatments are achieved using the same 8-wide stud width provides concrete technique knowledge for any builder designing custom supercars. The Revuelto teaches you smooth, continuous surface flow. The STO teaches you aggressive, purposeful truncation. Both are valid design approaches, and having them in the same box makes the comparison immediate and instructive.
607 pieces across two complete supercars delivers one of the best parts hauls in the Speed Champions range. The color spread depends on the specific livery colors LEGO has chosen, but you can expect a substantial quantity of slope elements, wedge plates, tiles, and standard plates in two distinct palettes. Two-car sets inherently provide more color diversity than single-car releases, and at 607 pieces the sheer volume of useful elements is competitive with much larger City or Creator sets.
The wheel and tire assemblies are notable: four sets for each car, totaling eight complete wheel assemblies with the current Speed Champions rubber tires and hub covers. Speed Champions wheels are among the most sought-after individual elements for vehicle MOC builders, and getting eight sets in one purchase is excellent value. The structural elements from both cars' chassis assemblies provide a solid base of standard Technic and System parts. Two driver minifigures add figure value, and any printed Lamborghini-specific elements carry collector premium. For parts-focused buyers, this two-pack competes with the Mercedes AMG two-pack (#76924) as the best Speed Champions parts investment per dollar.
The two distinct color palettes represent an underappreciated advantage of two-pack sets. Where a single-car Speed Champions set gives you a deep concentration of one color family, the Lamborghini two-pack gives you meaningful quantities of two different palettes. For MOC builders who work across multiple projects, this diversity is more practically useful than a double-deep stock of a single color. The slope elements in particular - present in both the Revuelto's angular bodywork and the STO's more organic surfaces - represent a varied selection of curved and wedge slopes that covers most of the commonly needed profiles for vehicle building. Eight wheel assemblies in a single purchase is genuinely exceptional, and the rubber tires from the current Speed Champions specification are the gold standard for 8-wide vehicle projects.
Two Lamborghinis displayed side by side create one of the most dramatic Speed Champions displays possible. The contrast between the Revuelto's angular, future-facing design and the Huracan STO's track-focused aggression tells a story about Lamborghini's evolution that no single car can communicate alone. The generational contrast is immediately legible even to viewers who cannot name the specific models - one car clearly represents the new, the other the established, and together they create a visual dialogue about automotive design philosophy.
The display footprint is roughly double a single Speed Champions car, which means the pair needs dedicated shelf space rather than a casual desk corner. But that increased footprint delivers proportionally increased visual impact. Two cars of this quality, from this brand, in complementary liveries, create a display that commands attention and rewards examination. Under warm lighting, the angular surfaces of the Revuelto catch light differently from the more flowing forms of the STO, adding visual variety that keeps the eye moving between the two models. The rear wing of the STO provides the strongest single visual element, while the Revuelto's body sculpture provides the most complex surface treatment.
For Speed Champions collectors, this two-pack fills the Lamborghini slot in the collection alongside the Lamborghini V12 Vision GT (#76923) from the 2024 wave. Together, three Lamborghinis create a brand display that rivals the McLaren three-tier collection across City, Speed Champions, and Technic.
The visual dialogue between the two cars becomes more interesting the longer you live with them on the shelf. At first glance, the generational contrast is the obvious story. But over time, you begin to notice the design elements that connect them - the shared Lamborghini DNA in the aggressive stance, the low nose, the way both cars communicate speed even while standing still. The STO's rear wing and the Revuelto's sculpted bodywork are different solutions to the same problem: how do you make a car look like it is moving when it is parked? That thematic connection - visible only through sustained display - gives this two-pack a depth that justifies its larger footprint. It is not just two cars sharing shelf space; it is a conversation between two eras of the same engineering philosophy.
607 pieces, two complete supercars, and two driver minifigures at the two-pack price point. The per-piece cost is competitive with single-car Speed Champions releases, which means you are effectively getting the second car at a proportional discount rather than a premium. Two-pack Speed Champions sets have historically offered better value than buying two individual sets separately, and the Lamborghini pair continues that trend.
The Lamborghini license adds brand cachet that extends beyond brick value. Lamborghini is one of the most aspirational automotive brands in the world, and LEGO's Speed Champions representation of two models in one box carries a premium feel that the price tag actually underdelivers. You are getting two Italian supercars with enough detail to be display-worthy at a cost that would barely cover a single die-cast model of either car. For the complete Speed Champions picture including this set, see our comprehensive roundup.
The long-term value proposition is also strong. Lamborghini-branded LEGO sets have historically performed well on the secondary market after retirement, driven by the combination of brand recognition and automotive enthusiasm that the raging bull commands. A two-pack that captures a specific generational transition - the end of the naturally aspirated V10 era and the beginning of the hybrid era - carries a commemorative significance that adds to its collector value over time. Whether you are building to display, building to invest, or simply building because you love Italian supercars, 607 pieces of Lamborghini engineering for this price is a proposition that The Earl endorses without hesitation.
Two driver minifigures are included, one for each car. Both wear Lamborghini-branded racing suits with the raging bull logo and team graphics. The two figures are differentiated through different color accents on their torso printing and distinct helmet designs, establishing each driver as belonging to a specific car. The racing suits feature detailed printing on both torso and legs with sponsor graphics and the Lamborghini shield prominently displayed.
Both helmets use the updated Speed Champions mold with Lamborghini-branded visor printing. Alternate hair pieces are included for helmetless display. The two figures are unique to this set and do not appear in the Lamborghini V12 Vision GT (#76923) or any other Speed Champions release. Having two Lamborghini drivers allows for paired display alongside their respective cars, creating a more complete scene than single-figure sets can achieve. The Italian supercar driver aesthetic - slightly more glamorous than F1 team suits - gives both figures a distinctive character in a Speed Champions minifigure collection.
The Lamborghini two-pack is for the builder who believes that supercars are best appreciated in context. A single Lamborghini on a shelf is impressive. Two Lamborghinis that represent different generations of the same design philosophy are a statement. If you are drawn to the drama, the noise, and the visual excess that defines Italian supercar culture, this box was packed with your enthusiasm in mind.
It is also the ideal Speed Champions purchase for builders who want maximum variety per dollar. Two cars, two liveries, two different build characters, two distinct display profiles - all from a single purchase. For the collector assembling a comprehensive Speed Champions display, the Lamborghini two-pack efficiently fills the Italian supercar slot with twice the content of a single-car release. For parents looking for a 90-minute to two-hour build session that delivers satisfying results for both adult and child builders, the sequential two-car format provides natural stopping points and a reward at the end of each build.
And for the automotive purist who understands the significance of the V10 to Lamborghini's identity, building the Huracan STO alongside the hybrid Revuelto is a bittersweet tribute to a powertrain era that will not return. The STO is the last of its kind. The Revuelto is the first of what comes next. Having them side by side, in brick form, on your shelf, is a way of honoring that transition. Sant'Agata would approve.
- ✓ Two complete Lamborghini supercars in one box - outstanding build variety
- ✓ Revuelto's angular bodywork is a technique showcase at 8-wide scale
- ✓ Huracan STO's massive rear wing is the most dramatic in Speed Champions
- ✓ 607 pieces delivers the best parts haul of any Speed Champions set
- ✓ Generational contrast between hybrid future and NA farewell
- ✓ Two driver minifigures with Lamborghini branding
- ✗ Requires more shelf space than single-car sets
- ✗ Some livery details rely on stickers
- ✗ Higher price point than individual Speed Champions releases
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