As Nintendo prepares to bring another beloved Zelda era back into the spotlight, LEGO’s own Zelda celebration is quietly slipping away. The LEGO The Legend of Zelda Great Deku Tree 2-in-1 set has sold out on LEGO Shop after nearly two years, leaving fans to hunt remaining stock elsewhere or deal with the realities of collector demand.
A first-wave LEGO Zelda set disappears from LEGO Shop
LEGO’s The Legend of Zelda Great Deku Tree 2-in-1 set is now sold out on LEGO Shop, according to a report highlighted via a post on X by Allen “Tormentalous” Tran. The set had spent time on LEGO’s “Retiring Soon” list before vanishing from the company’s official store after nearly two years on sale.
For many fans, this isn’t just another licensed LEGO release. The Great Deku Tree set was positioned as the first official LEGO Zelda set, and it builds around two character versions—one from Ocarina of Time and another from Breath of the Wild—giving it broader appeal than a LEGO set tied to a single Zelda entry.
The build itself clocks in at 2,500 pieces and includes four minifigures, plus a range of smaller Zelda-linked details. Those confirmed elements include the Master Sword, Hylian Shield, Ocarina of Time, Navi, Skulltulas, Koroks, and Link’s house.
Why the timing feels especially sharp for Zelda fans
The sellout lands right as Nintendo has revealed the long-rumored The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time remake for Switch 2. With Ocarina of Time once again set to trend, the Great Deku Tree—one of the most recognizable images associated with the game—becomes harder to ignore.
The LEGO set’s location choice also carries meaning across generations. For Ocarina of Time players, it reflects the start of Link’s journey and the point where the world opens beyond Kokiri Forest. For Breath of the Wild fans, it connects to the ancient guardian watching over the Master Sword. In other words, LEGO didn’t just pick a famous landmark—it picked one that resonates differently depending on which Zelda timeline a player grew up with.
What fans can do next: last-stock hunting vs. resale prices
Even though LEGO Shop is sold out, the set may not be fully out of reach. The Brick Fan reported that Target and Walmart still had copies available for shipping at the original price of $299.99 after LEGO’s sellout. If those remaining listings hold, fans could still complete a purchase without immediately jumping to resale.
But once those remaining retailer inventories disappear, the conversation will likely shift to secondhand markets. The first official LEGO Zelda set has the kind of collector appeal that can translate into steep price increases over time—especially when a major Zelda announcement is bringing attention back to the franchise.
Key points
- LEGO’s The Legend of Zelda Great Deku Tree 2-in-1 set has sold out on LEGO Shop after nearly two years.
- The set had been listed on LEGO’s “Retiring Soon” page before disappearing from the official store.
- Target and Walmart reportedly still had shipping stock at $299.99 after the LEGO sellout.
- Nintendo’s Ocarina of Time remake reveal for Switch 2 adds urgency to a set strongly tied to the game’s most iconic location.
| Item | Confirmed status from source |
|---|---|
| LEGO The Legend of Zelda Great Deku Tree 2-in-1 | Sold out on LEGO Shop; removed from LEGO’s official store |
| Target / Walmart copies | Reported available for shipping at $299.99 after LEGO sellout |
| Nintendo Ocarina of Time remake | Revealed for Switch 2 (long-rumored) |
Expert View
This sellout looks less like a routine retirement and more like a convergence moment: LEGO’s first official Zelda set vanishes right as Nintendo is pushing Ocarina of Time back into mainstream conversation. For the wider collector market, it signals that “franchise-timed” releases—especially those tied to universally recognized landmarks—can move from shelf product to scarcity-driven demand quickly, particularly when major announcements refresh community attention. In the esports-adjacent way the audience overlaps (streamers, speedrunners, Zelda content creators), that renewed spotlight can accelerate interest in physical releases as well as in-game viewership.

