REVIEW · MELBOURNE
Melbourne Museum: LEGO® Star Wars: The Exhibition Ticket
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8 million bricks sounds like a normal day in this galaxy. This LEGO® Star Wars exhibition hits Melbourne Museum with a hands-on, build-and-battle vibe, plus iconic scenes made in LEGO detail. I especially like the sheer workmanship and the way the builds turn big-screen moments into something you can see up close.
Two more reasons this ticket works: you get hands-on builds where you can make things like starfighters and custom LEGO lightsabers, and there are interactive moments that keep it from feeling like a passive walk-through. The one drawback to consider is that you need to plan around the exhibition’s starting times, since the ticket is valid for 1 day and entry times are based on availability.
Key things to know before you go
- Ryan Brickman McNaught is involved in the exhibition experience, bringing real LEGO professional know-how.
- 8 million LEGO bricks power the visuals, including gargantuan spaceships and major battle scenes.
- Hands-on stations let you build items like starfighters and LEGO lightsabers.
- You can help create massive Star Wars scenes brick by brick.
- A digital experience lets you choose allegiance and face off against friends.
In This Review
- Melbourne Museum LEGO Star Wars: why this ticket feels different
- The 8 million-brick exhibition: scenes, spaceships, and big moments
- Hands-on building: starfighters, LEGO lightsabers, and brick-by-brick scenes
- Digital allegiance and face-offs: play as part of the exhibit
- Timing your one-day visit at Melbourne Museum (and making it flow)
- Who should book: LEGO fans, Star Wars fans, and the hesitant partner
- Value check: what you’re paying for beyond the LEGO models
- Should you book this Melbourne Museum LEGO Star Wars ticket?
- FAQ
- Where is LEGO® Star Wars: The Exhibition held?
- How long is the experience ticket valid?
- What can I do during the exhibition?
- Is there any digital or interactive component?
- Is the exhibition wheelchair accessible?
- Can I cancel my booking?
- Does reserve and pay later cost anything today?
- Who operates the experience?
Melbourne Museum LEGO Star Wars: why this ticket feels different

LEGO® Star Wars: The Exhibition is special because it’s not trying to do Star Wars the usual way. Instead of just showing models, it leans hard into participation: build, battle, and explore through the galaxy using LEGO bricks as the main language. That’s a smart match for Melbourne Museum too, because the setting is built for curious wandering, reading, and taking your time.
One of the biggest draws is the scale. This exhibition uses over 8 million LEGO bricks, and it took more than 25,000 hours to create. That kind of effort usually shows up in the details: bigger-than-life spaceships, iconic characters, and scenes recreated with LEGO-style clarity. If you like visual problem-solving—how a model maker gets textures, angles, and depth out of plastic bricks—this is the sort of place that rewards your attention span.
Another reason I think you’ll enjoy it is the human factor behind the builds. The exhibition brings together two of the world’s best-known brands, with LEGO Certified Professional Ryan ‘Brickman’ McNaught at the controls. Even if you’re not a hardcore LEGO nerd, you can feel that this was built by people who care about how LEGO designs translate into real display pieces.
The ticket also makes it easy to justify a full day. It’s valid for 1 day, and it’s not just one room with a gift shop at the end. Expect a mix of exhibition viewing plus multiple interactive build experiences, so you’re not stuck watching the same static display every minute.
The 8 million-brick exhibition: scenes, spaceships, and big moments

The heart of the experience is the exhibition gallery itself, built to show off iconic Star Wars moments in stunning LEGO brick detail. Think epic battles, famous characters and scenes, and huge ships that look like they belong on a movie set—except you’re seeing the brick-by-brick construction logic. The exhibition’s messaging is clear: this is about bringing the Force into a LEGO world you can actually walk through.
The models aren’t random either. The description leans into “gargantuan spaceships” and “stunning landscapes from a galaxy far, far away,” which tells you the emphasis is on size and cinematic composition. You’ll likely spend time just repositioning yourself—stepping back for the full shape, then moving in to inspect the micro-details that LEGO fans obsess over.
What makes that valuable for you is how it changes your pace. In a typical themed exhibit, you move from one label to the next. Here, the building craft asks for slower viewing. You can treat it like a visual scavenger hunt: look for the familiar Star Wars silhouettes, then notice how the LEGO artists translated tricky angles and surfaces into bricks.
A practical note: since the ticket is a 1-day option with starting times, the flow matters. If you’re there when entry is less crowded, you’ll have an easier time lingering at the biggest installations and rotating through interactive zones without feeling rushed.
And yes—this is an exclusive Melbourne Museum experience, so you’re seeing it in a venue built for exhibits, not a pop-up corridor. That context matters. It’s easier to get comfortable, read the descriptions, and move at your own speed.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Melbourne
Hands-on building: starfighters, LEGO lightsabers, and brick-by-brick scenes

The hands-on part is the real reason to choose this ticket, especially if you’re bringing kids or if you just hate museum experiences that end the moment you’ve read the last sign. The exhibition invites you into interactive building activities, including making starfighters and creating custom lightsabers out of LEGO bricks.
What you’ll like about those stations is control. You’re not just consuming a story; you’re rebuilding a tiny version of it. Even if you know Star Wars mostly from the basics, the LEGO activities give you a second entry point. You can participate through the craft, not only through fandom.
There’s also a collaborative element: you’re invited to help build massive Star Wars landscapes/scenes brick by brick. That matters because it makes the space feel alive. Instead of everyone watching the same display, people are actively contributing to the bigger picture while they’re there.
Now, a balanced consideration. Hands-on stations can create a natural bottleneck if lots of people want the same activity at the same time. You can reduce that stress by going with a flexible rhythm: start in the exhibition viewing area, then shift into builds when you’ve had time to get oriented. That way you’re not standing around wondering what to do first.
Also, because the exhibition uses a lot of tactile, hands-on components, I’d plan for comfort. Wear shoes you don’t mind staying on your feet in. It’s the kind of experience where you’ll move more than you think, even if you never actually sit down.
Digital allegiance and face-offs: play as part of the exhibit

One of the more modern touches in this exhibition is the digital layer. Visitors are invited to see their LEGO Star Wars builds digitally come to life as they choose their allegiance and face off against friends. That’s a clever bridge between physical LEGO craft and the Star Wars universe’s competitive energy.
In practical terms, this helps you get more out of the time you spend building. When your brick-made creation gets an extra digital response, it changes the “completion feeling.” You’re not just done when you finish assembling; you get a payoff that ties back to the story themes—allegiance, confrontation, and character-driven conflict.
This also makes the experience easier for mixed groups. If your travel buddy loves Star Wars but you prefer making things, the digital element gives you something engaging either way. And if you’re not deeply knowledgeable about the franchise, the game-style format still makes sense because you can participate without needing to know every character’s backstory.
Just keep expectations grounded: this is still primarily a LEGO exhibition experience, not a full theme-park ride. The digital part is a fun add-on that enhances what you’ve already built and seen.
Timing your one-day visit at Melbourne Museum (and making it flow)
Your ticket is valid for 1 day, and you’ll want to check availability for starting times. That detail affects how you plan your day around the museum. If you arrive at random times, you may end up having to adjust to the session flow, which can interrupt your momentum.
My best advice is to build a simple plan with backups:
- Arrive earlier rather than later if you can.
- Give yourself time to see the biggest LEGO installations first.
- Save the hands-on stations for when you’re fully oriented and ready to participate.
Because this is at Melbourne Museum, it’s also smart to think of it as part of a broader museum day. You’ll likely want breaks, a place to reset, and a chance to stop and read descriptions instead of rushing through.
You’ll also appreciate that the venue is wheelchair accessible, so accessibility shouldn’t be a major planning headache. That said, interactive build areas tend to have their own physical circulation paths, so give yourself a little extra room and patience when you’re moving through activity zones.
Finally, remember that this exhibition is described as a world-first debut for the LEGO Star Wars concept at this location. That phrasing usually means it’s designed to be experienced, not just photographed. Go with the mindset of “watch, build, then play,” and the day will feel like one coherent story.
Who should book: LEGO fans, Star Wars fans, and the hesitant partner

This ticket makes the most sense for three groups.
First, LEGO fans. The exhibition is built on scale and craft: 8 million bricks, huge models, and professional-level design work connected to Ryan ‘Brickman’ McNaught. If you enjoy the engineering of LEGO—how shapes come together, how textures are built from simple pieces—this is the kind of place you’ll keep turning back to.
Second, Star Wars fans. The exhibition focuses on iconic characters and recognizable scenes, plus epic battles, gargantuan spaceships, and that galaxy-far-far-away vibe. You’ll get the emotional hits of familiar storytelling, but filtered through the LEGO aesthetic.
Third, people who aren’t sure they’re fans of either brand. The experience is intentionally interactive and hands-on, which lowers the barrier to entry. Even if Star Wars isn’t your thing, building starfighters and custom lightsabers gives you a reason to care. And the digital allegiance/facing-off element turns it into something you do, not just something you look at.
If you’re choosing for a mixed group, this is a strong option because it doesn’t force everyone to be equally invested in lore. LEGO activities and digital gameplay can carry the experience even when one person is more casual about the franchise.
You can also read our reviews of more museum experiences in Melbourne
Value check: what you’re paying for beyond the LEGO models

I can’t quote a price from the details here, but I can still help you judge value. The ticket is for 1 day and includes a full exhibition plus hands-on build activities and a digital component. That combo matters because it turns “see it once” into “do it multiple ways.”
Here’s what makes the value feel real:
- The exhibition scale is stated clearly: over 8 million bricks and more than 25,000 hours of work.
- You get more than viewing: you can build items like starfighters and LEGO lightsabers.
- You get participation through community building: helping create massive scenes brick by brick.
- You get a payoff through digital allegiance and friend face-offs.
If you’re the kind of traveler who hates paying for mostly static exhibits, this is closer to a hybrid museum-and-maker experience. If you love making things, it’s also a way to avoid the usual museum trap of passively watching art without touching anything.
The only value risk is time management. If you show up late in the day or arrive without a plan for starting times, you may end up spending more effort figuring out where to go next. Keep your day flexible, and prioritize the hands-on stations you care about most.
Should you book this Melbourne Museum LEGO Star Wars ticket?

Book it if you want a day that mixes big display-models with genuine participation. This is a strong choice for LEGO fans, Star Wars fans, and families because it includes building activities, collaborative brick work, and a digital allegiance/facing-off component. If you like events where you can both look closely and do something yourself, this one fits.
Skip or reconsider if you only want a short, quiet museum walk and you dislike interactive stations that can bring crowd energy. Also, plan around the exhibition’s starting times, since the ticket is valid for 1 day but entry timing depends on availability.
If you’re aiming for an experience that feels like more than a photo stop, I’d put this high on your Melbourne list.
FAQ

Where is LEGO® Star Wars: The Exhibition held?
It’s at Melbourne Museum in Victoria, Australia.
How long is the experience ticket valid?
The ticket is valid for 1 day. You can check availability to see starting times.
What can I do during the exhibition?
You can explore the LEGO® Star Wars exhibition and join hands-on build activities, including building starfighters and creating custom LEGO lightsabers.
Is there any digital or interactive component?
Yes. Your LEGO Star Wars builds can come to life digitally as you choose your allegiance and face off against friends.
Is the exhibition wheelchair accessible?
Yes, the experience is wheelchair accessible.
Can I cancel my booking?
Yes. Free cancellation is available up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund.
Does reserve and pay later cost anything today?
No. The option is described as reserve now & pay later, so you can book your spot and pay nothing today.
Who operates the experience?
The provider is Museums Victoria.
































