This week’s sharpest moves came from older and harder-to-source items, with vintage Town, Dacta, and event-exclusive sets leading the upside. On the downside, the biggest drops were mostly smaller collectibles and accessories, which often swing more when a few sales reset pricing.
Top gainers
Shell Service Station is the most interesting mover in the group. At $749.99 after a 19.7% weekly jump, this looks like a classic vintage scarcity move. Old Town sets with real-world branding have a small supply base and a buyer pool that includes both LEGO collectors and nostalgia-driven buyers, so pricing can move fast when a few strong sales hit.
San Diego Comic-Con 2008 BrickMaster at $1,589.79, up 19.4%, fits a different pattern: event-exclusive pricing. Comic-Con items trade in a thin market, and that usually means bigger week-to-week swings than standard retail sets. Its 13.1% yearly change suggests this was not just a one-off spike, but part of a broader premium attached to convention-only releases.
Creator Value Pack also stands out because the current estimated price is $239.70 against a retail price of $9.99. A 19.8% weekly move on a 2004 Creator bundle points to supply friction more than seasonality. Value packs and promotional-style products often disappear into collections and stay there, which leaves very little active inventory years later.
Top decliners
Crocodile Legend Beast fell 20.0% to $42.22, the steepest decline of the week. That kind of move is common in retired small-format sets when a handful of lower-priced listings or sales hit at once. The bigger picture is less dramatic: it is still up 7.1% over the last year.
Dual FX Racers dropped 19.9% to $234.00, which is notable because vintage Town was also one of the strongest areas on the gainers list. That split tells you this is not a broad pullback in older Town sets. It is more likely a thin-market reset, where one or two transactions can move the estimate sharply in either direction.
The broader read this week is clear: scarce legacy items and exclusives are still attracting the strongest bids, while lower-priced collectibles remain more volatile on a week-to-week basis. When both a 1976 Dacta set and a Comic-Con exclusive land among the top gainers, demand is leaning toward rarity and niche appeal rather than broad theme momentum.
Data as of April 10, 2026.
Based on historical market data from BrickEconomy's pricing models. Past performance does not guarantee future appreciation. Prices reflect estimated secondary market values and may vary by condition and seller.
This article was generated by BrickEconomy's market analysis system. All prices sourced from our
data methodology. Data as of April 10, 2026.