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Star Wars Set #75312

LEGO Star Wars Boba Fett's Starship

Honest review of the LEGO 75312 Boba Fett's Starship — the modern, mid-size Firespray-class starship with rotating cockpit, Boba Fett, and Han Solo in carbonite.

By Tanner — The LEGO King
LEGO Star Wars Boba Fett's Starship

Best Price

$49.99

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Hey everyone, it’s Tanner. The LEGO Star Wars Boba Fett’s Starship (set 75312) is the modern, affordable, mid-size Firespray ship that fills the gap between starter-set scale and the UCS Slave I (75060). At $50 MSRP, it’s the right Boba Fett ship for most builders.

What Makes This Set Special

This is the modern release of Boba Fett’s Firespray-class starship — re-named from “Slave I” to “Boba Fett’s Starship” in the 2021 release for trademark reasons. The build delivers most of the iconic UCS features at a much more accessible price point:

  • Rotating cockpit transitions between flight and hover modes
  • Boba Fett minifigure (in his iconic Mandalorian armor)
  • The Mandalorian (Din Djarin) for crossover staging
  • Stormtrooper for Imperial scenes
  • Han Solo in carbonite as a small accessory

The rotating cockpit mechanism uses the same engineering principle as the UCS Slave I (75060), but at a smaller scale and with simpler gearing. The transition feels less mechanical-precise than the UCS version — but it works, and at $50 it’s a remarkable value.

The Build

593 pieces, roughly 3 hours across one session. Sequenced lower hull first, then the cockpit and rotation mechanism, then the wings, then the figures last.

The cockpit rotation is the engineering highlight. The cockpit pod rotates on a single axle through the center of the ship, and the wings stay fixed while the cockpit transitions. The mechanism is fun but slightly delicate — over-rotation can dislodge the cockpit clip.

The 4 Minifigures

Four figures, all canonical Star Wars characters:

  • Boba Fett in his iconic Mandalorian armor
  • The Mandalorian (Din Djarin) with his Beskar armor
  • Stormtrooper in standard Imperial armor
  • Han Solo in carbonite (as a small accessory)

The inclusion of Din Djarin is the smart casting choice. With both Boba and Din in the box, you can stage Mandalorian/Boba team-ups that match the Disney+ shows. It’s the kind of figure-pairing that adds narrative density without inflating the price.

What to Watch For

The wing-panel stickers are the most visible sticker work in the set. Stickers go on slightly curved surfaces, and alignment matters. Take your time on the wings — a misaligned sticker is the most-photographed flaw in the set.

The cockpit rotation loosens with frequent use. Treat the rotation as an occasional show-off feature, not a daily play interaction. Display in flight mode 95% of the time and use the rotation only for variety.

Display Notes

Footprint: 20cm × 16cm × 14cm tall. The smallest-footprint Boba Fett ship in the lineup — fits any shelf or desk corner.

This set pairs specifically well with the Razor Crest for a “modern Mandalorian ship” cluster. Both ships have similar silhouette aesthetics and lore-shared characters.

Is It Worth $50?

At 593 pieces it’s $0.084 per piece — solid value for a 9+ Star Wars set, beating most non-UCS releases on per-piece math. The four minifigures alone are worth roughly $20 in figure-pack pricing, so the build itself effectively costs $30 — which is excellent for a 600-piece kinetic ship build.

For Boba Fett fans without UCS budget: must-buy at MSRP. For UCS-tier collectors, the UCS Slave I (75060) is the definitive build — but at $700+ retired pricing, this set is a perfectly reasonable substitute that captures the silhouette and the rotation mechanism.

Recommended at MSRP, especially as a gift or starter Star Wars set.

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