What’s in the box?
You get three plastic bags in the Kapp’n’s Island Boat Tour box — it seems that only Bunnie’s Outdoor Activities contains Lego’s sustainable paper packaging in this initial batch of Animal Crossing offerings — along with Kapp’n’s boat hull and the requisite instructions.
Kapp’n’s Island Boat Tour build
As always, the minifigure is the first thing you assemble and Kapp’n looks as fetching as ever.
Once you’ve got the kappa captain himself, it’s time to build his boat. She’s a modest but sturdy vessel, with a little outboard motor, a lantern, and a flask featuring a neat handle element we haven’t encountered before. Kapp’n also has some K.K. Slider sheet music onboard to help while away those lonely nights at sea with a shanty.
Bag two introduces Marshal and some of the beachy terrain tiles. The minifigures are perhaps the strongest element of all these sets, and Marshal is no different, with great detail and a cute tail element. Unlike every other minifigure in the range, however, Marshal’s legs are the short-and-static variety — they don’t bend at the hip or have holes in the back.
This isn’t a huge problem, although it does mean he’s unable to sit down on the beach recliners you build directly after assembling him, nor in the boat.
The beach tiles themselves are fun — we enjoy any area with lapping water and wash from the waves depicted in brick form. Again, loads of detail here, from the sandwich/hamburger and drink beside the red recliners to the fishing rod and the palm tree with its dangling coconuts. The umbrella is the same one you find outside Rosie’s house.
The third and final bag features a hill with a ladder and a rock on top (bash with a shovel for Bells,) a tiny jetty for Kapp’n to dock his boat, and an adorable little crab. A recipe sits on a stump under a second coconut tree and it balances the set out nicely in the default configuration — obviously, you’re free to arrange things how you like.
Kapp’n’s Island Boat Tour cost
Kapp’n’s Island Boat Tour sits in the mid-range of the available Lego Animal Crossing sets, with a retail price of $29.99 / £24.99 / €29.99.
You get 233 pieces, including two exclusive minifigures and a boat. That works out to just under 13 cents a piece, which isn’t the best value you’ll find, but it’s in the ballpark for licensed sets.
Overall, there’s a nice mix of elements here for the price point. We like the diverse terrain, with the shoreline detail adding visual interest as a display piece and the hill and palm trees bringing some vertical variety, too. If you combined multiple copies of this kit with multiple copies of Bunnie’s Outdoor Activities, you could assemble quite the island.
What’s in the box?
You get three plastic bags in the Kapp’n’s Island Boat Tour box — it seems that only Bunnie’s Outdoor Activities contains Lego’s sustainable paper packaging in this initial batch of Animal Crossing offerings — along with Kapp’n’s boat hull and the requisite instructions.
Kapp’n’s Island Boat Tour build
As always, the minifigure is the first thing you assemble and Kapp’n looks as fetching as ever.
Once you’ve got the kappa captain himself, it’s time to build his boat. She’s a modest but sturdy vessel, with a little outboard motor, a lantern, and a flask featuring a neat handle element we haven’t encountered before. Kapp’n also has some K.K. Slider sheet music onboard to help while away those lonely nights at sea with a shanty.
Bag two introduces Marshal and some of the beachy terrain tiles. The minifigures are perhaps the strongest element of all these sets, and Marshal is no different, with great detail and a cute tail element. Unlike every other minifigure in the range, however, Marshal’s legs are the short-and-static variety — they don’t bend at the hip or have holes in the back.
This isn’t a huge problem, although it does mean he’s unable to sit down on the beach recliners you build directly after assembling him, nor in the boat.
The beach tiles themselves are fun — we enjoy any area with lapping water and wash from the waves depicted in brick form. Again, loads of detail here, from the sandwich/hamburger and drink beside the red recliners to the fishing rod and the palm tree with its dangling coconuts. The umbrella is the same one you find outside Rosie’s house.
The third and final bag features a hill with a ladder and a rock on top (bash with a shovel for Bells,) a tiny jetty for Kapp’n to dock his boat, and an adorable little crab. A recipe sits on a stump under a second coconut tree and it balances the set out nicely in the default configuration — obviously, you’re free to arrange things how you like.
Kapp’n’s Island Boat Tour cost
Kapp’n’s Island Boat Tour sits in the mid-range of the available Lego Animal Crossing sets, with a retail price of $29.99 / £24.99 / €29.99.
You get 233 pieces, including two exclusive minifigures and a boat. That works out to just under 13 cents a piece, which isn’t the best value you’ll find, but it’s in the ballpark for licensed sets.
Overall, there’s a nice mix of elements here for the price point. We like the diverse terrain, with the shoreline detail adding visual interest as a display piece and the hill and palm trees bringing some vertical variety, too. If you combined multiple copies of this kit with multiple copies of Bunnie’s Outdoor Activities, you could assemble quite the island.
Given the terrain tiles included — the sandy beach, the two levels of grass-topped hill with bamboo, and the lapping waves of the shoreline — we feel this is a slightly better standalone set compared to Bunnie’s, with the waves on the coastline providing a ‘natural’ border as Kapp’n roams where he pleases over the water.
It still feels a little disjointed, but with two minifigs, including our favourite salty seadog, we came away feeling positive. Honestly, if this kit had included Gulliver and/or Pascal diving for scallops, plus some shells and communicator parts to dig up, this would have been essential. As it is, it’s just ‘good’.
Conclusion
Kapp’n’s Boat Tour might not deliver everything that Animal Crossing fans want from a beach-based set, but it works pretty well for display while also retaining the reconfigurable, modular design that threads all the Lego Animal Crossing builds together for creative play. While it works better alongside the larger sets, the charm and detail here is enough, just, to make this a worthwhile purchase on its own, especially if you’re taken with the idea of moving the terrain around like jigsaw pieces. And who’s not on board with Kapp’n? Worth a look.
- Great minifigs, as per the other sets
- Great details, as per the other sets
- We like the mixture of coastline, sand, and grass tiles here
- The shoreline acts as a natural border for display
- The little crab is impossibly cute
- Less so than Bunnie’s and Julian’s, but it still feels like an ‘add-on’ set
- Marshal is unable to sit, bend over, or lean back
- Imagine if it had a Gulliver!
Good 7/10
Buy LEGO Animal Crossing
- 77046 Julian’s Birthday Party
- 77047 Bunnie’s Outdoor Activities
- 77048 Kapp’n’s Island Boat Tour
- 77049 Isabelle’s House Visit
- 77050 Nook’s Cranny & Rosie’s House