Description
This LEGO Harry Potter Christmas activity book blends storytelling, puzzles, and a brick-building kit, making it a perfect gift for young witches and wizards who love hands-on fun.
The set includes three LEGO minifigures and a buildable scene, letting kids recreate their favorite Hogwarts moments right out of the box.
Filled with fun facts and holiday-themed activities, it encourages creativity and keeps little fans engaged for hours without a screen.
Note that this is an activity book with a small brick kit, not a full LEGO set, so it's best suited as a stocking stuffer or travel companion rather than a standalone build.
Buy Suggestion
[Verdict]
Skip this unless you need a low-cost, portable activity for a Harry Potter–loving child ages 6–9 on a car trip or as a stocking stuffer. The real value is the three minifigures and small buildable scene, but the $9.39 price buys a thin paperback with a few puzzles, not a full LEGO set. Buy it only if the minifigures are essential to your kid’s collection and the activity-book format fits a specific short-use scenario.
[Spec analysis]
At 62% off list, this 24-page activity book bundles a small brick kit (three minifigures plus a buildable Hogwarts scene) with holiday-themed puzzles and facts. The minifigures are exclusive to this set, so completionists get something unique, but the brick count is minimal—probably under 50 pieces based on similar LEGO book kits. The 62% discount (from $24.99 to $9.39) reflects the book’s low production cost, not a premium play experience. Compared to a standard LEGO set at the same price (e.g., a $10 polybag with one minifigure), this offers more content but far less replayability: once the puzzles are solved and the scene built, there’s no reconfigurable play value.
[Honest drawback]
The activity book’s puzzles are one-time use—solve them once and the paperback loses its draw. Also, the buildable scene is small (likely fits in a palm), so it won’t satisfy kids expecting a full LEGO playset.
[Price take]
At $9.39 (62% off), this matches the average price of a single-minifigure LEGO polybag, so you’re paying a fair price for three exclusive minifigures plus a book—but the discount is only real value if you specifically need the minifigures.
Skip this unless you need a low-cost, portable activity for a Harry Potter–loving child ages 6–9 on a car trip or as a stocking stuffer. The real value is the three minifigures and small buildable scene, but the $9.39 price buys a thin paperback with a few puzzles, not a full LEGO set. Buy it only if the minifigures are essential to your kid’s collection and the activity-book format fits a specific short-use scenario.
[Spec analysis]
At 62% off list, this 24-page activity book bundles a small brick kit (three minifigures plus a buildable Hogwarts scene) with holiday-themed puzzles and facts. The minifigures are exclusive to this set, so completionists get something unique, but the brick count is minimal—probably under 50 pieces based on similar LEGO book kits. The 62% discount (from $24.99 to $9.39) reflects the book’s low production cost, not a premium play experience. Compared to a standard LEGO set at the same price (e.g., a $10 polybag with one minifigure), this offers more content but far less replayability: once the puzzles are solved and the scene built, there’s no reconfigurable play value.
[Honest drawback]
The activity book’s puzzles are one-time use—solve them once and the paperback loses its draw. Also, the buildable scene is small (likely fits in a palm), so it won’t satisfy kids expecting a full LEGO playset.
[Price take]
At $9.39 (62% off), this matches the average price of a single-minifigure LEGO polybag, so you’re paying a fair price for three exclusive minifigures plus a book—but the discount is only real value if you specifically need the minifigures.