Lego Ninja

Lego Ninja was a theme and product range of the construction toy Lego. Launched in 1998, the collection was its own theme. It had many elements of the ninja warriors from feudal Japan.[1] The majority of the sets were released in 1998 and 1999; however, three small sets of minifigures were released in 2000 as part of the "Mini Heroes Collection". After this, the theme was discontinued, and was effectively replaced by the "Knights Castle" theme in 2000.

Ninja (LEGO Theme)
Parent themeLego Castle
SubjectNinja
Availability1998–2000
Total sets29

Background

The Ninja theme was released as a sub-theme of the Lego Castle theme, which from 1984 had started to develop into specific factions. Lego Ninja immediately followed the Fright Knights theme, which had been in production from 1997 to 1998. In contrast to Fright Knights, Lego Ninja took its influence from a more realistic starting point and was set in mountainous Japan with medieval buildings.[2]

Construction sets

A total of 29 toy sets were released as part of the Ninja theme, which centred on three distinctive groups; the ninja, the samurai and the robbers.[3] The toy sets featured a variety of buildings and vehicles, including fortresses and boats. The ninja crest was yellow with a black wingless dragon. The Samurai had blue banners bearing a golden fan. The robber's crest was a red, black and silver bull's head. The ninja minifigures were designed in a variety of colours, including black, red, grey, green and white and featured grey shoulder plates. In contrast, the samurai were dressed in black, blue and silver, and the robbers were dressed in red and green.[2]

NumberNameYearPiecesMinifigs
1099-1Ninja Blaster1999241
1184-1Cart1999241
1185-1Raft1999251
1186-1Cart1999251
1187-1Glider1999231
1269-1White Ninja1999231
3016-1Master and Heavy Gun1998241
3017-1Ninpo Water Spider1998251
3018-1LEGO Shogun Go!1998251
3019-1Ninpo Big Bat1998231
3050-1Shanghai Surprise19991043
3051-1Blaze Attack19991452
3052-1Ninja Fire Fortress19991693
3053-1Emperor's Stronghold19993314
3074-1Red Ninja's Dragon Glider1999201
3075-1Ninja Master's Boat1999211
3076-1White Ninja's Tank1999231
3077-1Ninja Shogun's Mini Base1999221
3344-1One Minifig Pack - Ninja #1200091
3345-1Three Minifig Pack - Ninja #22000213
3346-1Three Minifig Pack - Ninja #32000223
4805-1Ninja Knights1999315
6013-1Samurai Swordsman1998131
6033-1Treasure Transport1998543
6045-1Ninja Surprise19981123
6083-2Samurai Stronghold19981983
6088-1Robber's Retreat19982774
6089-1Stone Tower Bridge19984095
6093-1Flying Ninja Fortress[4]19986949

Legacy

In 2010, Series 1 of the Lego Collectable Minifigures Series contained a ninja minifigure clearly based on the theme.[5] A year later, in early 2011, Lego released the Lego Ninjago theme and associated television series Ninjago: Masters of Spinjitzu, which took heavy inspiration from the Ninja theme.[6]

References

  1. Lipkowitz, Daniel (2009), The Lego Book, Dorling Kindersley, p. 64, ISBN 978-1-4053-4169-1.
  2. Herman, Sarah (2012-07-09). Building a History: The Lego Group. Grub Street Publishers. p. 159. ISBN 978-1-78340-804-7.
  3. "BrickLink Reference Catalog - Sets - Category Ninja". www.bricklink.com. Retrieved 2021-08-02.
  4. Farshtey, Gregory; Lipkowitz, Daniel; Hugo, Simon (2020-10-01). LEGO® Minifigure A Visual History New Edition. Dorling Kindersley Limited. p. 72. ISBN 978-0-241-50202-0.
  5. "Lego Collectible Minifigures Series 1 Poster". www.bricklink.com. Retrieved 2021-06-12.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  6. Estrella, Ernie (2017-09-20). "LEGO Ninjago has a long and storied history you definitely didn't know about". SYFY WIRE. Archived from the original on 2020-12-02. Retrieved 2021-06-12.
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