Lego Gives Its Analog Bricks a Digital Brain—With No Screen Time
Released on 01/07/2026
LEGO is giving its famously analog bricks
a new digital brain.
The toy behemoth has revealed its new SMART Play platform
at CES in Las Vegas this week.
And the new tech all revolves around LEGO's patented sensor
and tech-laden SMART Brick,
a brick that gives the world's favorite
plastic play things a brain.
Now, this SMART Brick is the same size
as a standard 2 x 4 LEGO brick,
but it's capable of connecting to new SMART Minifigures
and SMART Tags,
and then interacting with these in real time,
adding sound and light effects
as kids and adults play with them.
LEGO isn't stupid,
so it's launching this new incarnation
in three Star Wars sets on March 1st,
hoping for a guaranteed hit from day one.
Now WIRED's pick of the three
is the $160, 962-piece Throne Room Dual set,
complete with three SMART Minifigs.
The combination of the brick brain plus connected Minifigs
will apparently let you recreate
the iconic final lightsaber battle
at the end of Star Wars: Return of the Jedi.
[LEGO set plays Imperial March]
The heart of the system is the SMART Brick's
custom-made chip, measuring just 4.1 millimeters,
running LEGO's bespoke Play Engine,
it can detect motion, orientation,
and magnetic fields,
and there's even a proprietary
Brick-to-Brick position system
to sense distance, direction,
and orientation between multiple SMART Bricks.
Other elements crammed into the eight stud brick
are an LED light array, accelerometers, light sensors,
and a sound sensor,
and even a miniature speaker,
which uses the brick's internal air spaces
to amplify the noise. [helicopter blade whirring]
Seven years of development have resulted
in SMART Bricks capable of creating a Bluetooth-based,
self-organizing network that requires no setup,
no app, no central hub,
nor external controllers,
and so no screen time at all.
LEGO said they didn't even want a power switch on the brick
or even a reset button,
and the SMART Bricks all recharge wirelessly
and stay powered even after years of no use.
LEGO claims one of the main aims of SMART Play
is to get kids and parents all playing with sets
for much longer through this new age of plastic interaction
and stop those brick bores
who build for display and no play.
[Jeremy mimics whooshing noises]
[whimsical music]
I built this.
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