The Bugatti Vision Gran Turismo is Speed Champions' first venture into the world of video game concept cars, and the build reflects the freedom that comes with a design unconstrained by real-world manufacturing. At 284 pieces, the build takes approximately 35-45 minutes and follows the 8-wide format, but the shapes you are creating feel different from typical road car or race car Speed Champions sets. The Vision GT's flowing, organic bodywork - originally designed for the Gran Turismo PlayStation series - challenges LEGO's angular brick medium in interesting ways.
The build progression emphasizes curves over angles. Where most Speed Champions cars use sharp wedge plates and defined edges, the Vision GT uses layered slopes and rounded elements to create a body shape that flows from nose to tail without hard breaks. The central dorsal fin that defines the Vision GT's silhouette is the build highlight: a vertical element that rises from the roof line and extends rearward, giving the car a profile unlike anything else in the Speed Champions catalog. Building this element and watching it transform the car's character from generic supercar to unmistakable Bugatti concept is the single most satisfying moment in the construction.
The color scheme - predominantly Bugatti's signature blue - creates a rich, consistent visual throughout the build. The blue elements accumulate smoothly, and the moments where black accent pieces arrive to define the air intakes and lower body create punctuation marks in the color narrative. The cockpit area is more enclosed than typical Speed Champions cars, reflecting the Vision GT's fighter-jet-inspired canopy design. For builders who have completed multiple Speed Champions sets and crave something that feels genuinely different, the Vision GT delivers.
The organic body shape is the technique story here. Real-world cars have manufacturing constraints that naturally produce angular surfaces and defined panel breaks. Concept cars designed for video games have no such limitations, and LEGO's designers have embraced that freedom by using layered curved slopes in sequences that create smoother body transitions than standard Speed Champions sets achieve. The rear fender area uses a combination of curved slope elements that create a flowing haunch shape, eschewing the sharp cutlines that define most 8-wide cars. Studying how these curves are built from angular LEGO elements teaches valuable lessons about approximating organic forms with geometric parts.
The dorsal fin construction uses a bracket-mounted vertical assembly that sits on the centerline of the car. The bracket connection allows the fin to be thin - only one stud wide - while maintaining rigidity through the mounting points at its base. This technique for creating thin vertical elements on vehicle centerlines is applicable to any supercar or concept car MOC that requires a roof-mounted fin, antenna, or aerodynamic element. The Bugatti Centodieci (#77240) from the same range uses a completely different approach to Bugatti's design language, making the two sets a compelling technique comparison study.
284 pieces with a strong blue element concentration. Bugatti blue is a rich, distinctive shade that LEGO renders through a combination of blue and dark blue elements, and the Vision GT provides a good selection of curved slopes, standard plates, and tiles in these colors. The curved slope elements are particularly useful for builders working on anything that requires flowing surfaces: sports cars, boats, aircraft, or organic architectural forms. Black accent pieces for the lower body and intake areas add universally useful dark elements to the spread.
The single driver minifigure with racing suit and helmet adds figure value, and the standard Speed Champions wheel assemblies maintain compatibility across the range. The printed elements carry Bugatti and Gran Turismo branding that has collector appeal for gaming enthusiasts and automotive fans alike. The video game connection makes this set's printed elements culturally distinctive - they represent a crossover between LEGO, Bugatti, and PlayStation that is unlikely to be repeated in this specific combination. The curved slope elements in Bugatti blue are valuable for builders working on sleek vehicle designs, marine themes, or any project requiring a rich, deep blue that carries more visual weight than standard blue. The blue parts from the Vision GT complement those from the Centodieci to create a growing Bugatti blue inventory that serves both car MOCs and broader creative projects.
The Vision GT is one of the most visually distinctive Speed Champions cars on the shelf, and the reason is its silhouette. The dorsal fin, the flowing fenders, and the enclosed cockpit create a profile that is instantly recognizable as something other than a standard road car or race car. It looks like a concept car. It looks like it belongs in a video game. And that otherworldly quality makes it a conversation piece in any Speed Champions display - the car that visitors pick up and ask about.
The blue color scheme photographs beautifully under any lighting condition. The curves catch light in ways that angular Speed Champions cars cannot, creating highlight-and-shadow patterns across the bodywork that add visual depth at normal viewing distances. Displayed alongside the Bugatti Centodieci (#77240), you get a Bugatti heritage display that spans from hypercar reality to concept car fantasy. Add the original Lamborghini V12 Vision GT (#76923) and you have a Vision GT face-off between two of the world's most prestigious manufacturers.
The Gran Turismo gaming connection adds a display context that no other Speed Champions car shares. For builders who display LEGO alongside gaming memorabilia, the Vision GT bridges both worlds - it is simultaneously a LEGO car, a Bugatti, and a PlayStation icon. That triple identity gives it display versatility that single-context sets lack.
284 pieces at the standard Speed Champions single-car price point. The per-piece cost is consistent with the range, and the unique design DNA - concept car rather than production car - adds novelty value that production-car sets cannot match. You are not buying a car you can see on the road. You are buying a car that exists only in digital space and now in LEGO form, which gives the purchase a collector quality that production car sets lack.
The Gran Turismo license adds gaming-culture value that extends the set's appeal beyond traditional automotive fans. PlayStation Gran Turismo players who may never have considered buying a LEGO set will recognize this car, and the crossover potential between LEGO and gaming audiences makes the Vision GT a set that could introduce new builders to Speed Champions. For the full range of Speed Champions offerings, see our complete roundup.
A single driver minifigure is included wearing a Bugatti-branded racing suit in the car's signature blue color scheme. The torso printing features the Bugatti macaron badge, sponsor graphics, and blue-to-black color blocking that coordinates with the Vision GT's livery. The leg printing continues the racing suit design. The helmet is printed with Bugatti branding and a visor design that complements the car's aesthetic. An alternate hair piece is included for helmetless display.
The figure is exclusive to this set and represents the only Gran Turismo-associated driver in the Speed Champions range. The racing suit design leans more toward concept-car glamour than functional racing utility, giving the figure a distinctive character that stands apart from F1 or GT racing drivers in the Speed Champions lineup. For minifigure collectors, the Bugatti Vision GT driver fills a unique niche - part automotive, part gaming culture - that no other Speed Champions figure occupies.
The Bugatti Vision Gran Turismo is for gamers, automotive dreamers, and Speed Champions collectors who want something that defies the usual categories. If you play Gran Turismo, if you appreciate concept car design, or if you simply want the most visually distinctive car in the 2026 Speed Champions range, the Vision GT delivers an experience and an aesthetic that no production car in the lineup can match. The PlayStation connection gives it a cultural identity that bridges the gap between LEGO builders and gaming enthusiasts - two communities that overlap more than either might expect.
For Bugatti collectors building a brand-specific display, the Vision GT pairs naturally with the Centodieci (#77240) to create a two-car Bugatti showcase that spans reality and fantasy. The real hypercar and the virtual concept car, side by side, represent the full spectrum of Bugatti's design philosophy - from production engineering to unbounded creative expression. That pairing is unique in the Speed Champions range and creates a display with genuine storytelling potential.
Builders who seek variety in their Speed Champions collection will appreciate the Vision GT's departure from the production-car formula. After building several real-world race cars and road cars, the organic bodywork and concept car proportions of the Vision GT feel genuinely fresh. It is the palette cleanser that prevents Speed Champions fatigue - the car that reminds you that LEGO brick can approximate curves and organic forms as effectively as it captures angular aerodynamics.
The Bugatti Vision GT exists in an unusual space -- it is a car designed for a video game, now rendered in physical brick. The original Vision Gran Turismo was Bugatti's concept entry for the Gran Turismo racing game franchise, a design exercise unbound by the practical constraints of road legality, crash testing, or production economics. That freedom shows in the design. The proportions are more extreme than any road-legal Bugatti. The aero surfaces are more aggressive. The silhouette is more dramatic. And LEGO captured that virtual DNA convincingly at 8-wide scale. For gamers who recognize the car from hours spent racing it digitally, the physical version carries a nostalgia that other Speed Champions cars tied to real-world vehicles cannot replicate. It bridges the gap between the screen and the shelf in a way that feels genuinely novel for the Speed Champions line.
- ✓ Organic flowing bodywork unlike any other Speed Champions car
- ✓ Distinctive dorsal fin creates an unmistakable silhouette
- ✓ Bugatti blue color scheme photographs beautifully
- ✓ Gran Turismo gaming crossover adds unique cultural value
- ✓ Curved slope technique is excellent study material for MOC builders
- ✓ Strong conversation piece in any Speed Champions display
- ✗ Concept car design may not appeal to purists who prefer production cars
- ✗ Some sticker reliance for livery details
- ✗ Single minifigure at the standard price point
Some products may be provided by manufacturers. This page contains affiliate links. All opinions are my own.
- Bugatti Centodieci Review - The real-world Bugatti hypercar at 8-wide scale
- Lamborghini V12 Vision GT Review - The other Vision GT concept in Speed Champions
- Ferrari SF90 XX Stradale Review - Italian hypercar rival from the 2026 wave
- Every Speed Champions Set Reviewed - The complete roundup
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