2025-10-02 18:30:09
Chris Reed

The LEGO Game Boy set immediately sparked my interest when it was first announced. It combines two of my very favorite things: LEGO and video games. By every metric we have at IGN, it’s been an enormous hit with our readers as well. It’s a remarkable set, as we discovered when we built it, in that it’s a near 1:1 scale re-creation of the Nintendo’s groundbreaking handheld, with a number of fun details, unique pieces, and Easter eggs. And at $59.99 (see it at Amazon) it seems priced just right.

Via email, I interviewed Carl Merriam, Senior Designer at the LEGO Group. Carl has designed a number of LEGO sets over the years, including many other Nintendo LEGO sets, like the Mario & Yoshi one that I built and that sits on my desk to this day.

IGN: How did you get started designing sets at the LEGO Group?

Carl Merriam: I joined the LEGO Group in 2014 as a designer on LEGO Minecraft. I always say that working as a LEGO designer is beyond a dream for me, as I built with LEGO bricks my entire life. In college I started to photograph my work and put it online. I did some LEGO commission work for family and friends and a few promotional things for local business.

I found the AFOL (Adult Fans Of LEGO) community online and started to share my builds with them. I eventually made a portfolio of these photos and applied for a design position. I applied on a Friday. The following Monday I received an email from the LEGO Group: “Come to Denmark for a workshop in two weeks.” I went to the workshop and had a ton of fun building with LEGO bricks in Billund. Then a few weeks later I got a call with a job offer.

IGN: What other sets have you worked on before the LEGO Game Boy?

Carl Merriam: I have designed products for many different LEGO franchises including Super Mario, Minecraft, Mixels, Boost, Star Wars, Icons, Ideas and MINDSTORMS. The full list can be found here at Brickset.

IGN: Were you a fan of the Game Boy as a kid?

Carl Merriam: My older sister Julie got the first Nintendo Game Boy in our family and used to charge us a dollar an hour to play it. Eventually I got my own and played it like crazy. My favorite Game Boy game is The Legend of Zelda: Link’s Awakening. Designing the LEGO version of that Game Pak made my heart skip a beat.

IGN: The lenticular screen pieces are very cool. Have those kinds of pieces ever been used in a LEGO set before?

Carl Merriam: The LEGO Harry Potter house banners from 2023 use the same kind of lenticular sheets, but we like to make new things with the same pieces.

My older sister got the first Nintendo Game Boy in our family and used to charge us a dollar an hour to play it.

IGN: How did you decide which games to include? Did they have to be first-party Nintendo games? Did you consider going with Tetris?

Carl Merriam: LEGO and Nintendo have a longstanding partnership, so we decided to celebrate these first-party games, as they were some of the first to be included in the Game Boy portfolio.

IGN: What's your favorite part about the LEGO Game Boy set?

Carl Merriam: The LEGO System is a language. The LEGO Game Boy is a poem written with LEGO Bricks.

I used all my powers as both a veteran LEGO designer and a lifelong LEGO fan to make this set as excellent as possible, so there are lots of favorite things to choose from. If I have to pick just one it’s the power switch. While working on this set, I focused on replicating all the haptics of the real Game Boy as closely as possible. I made all the buttons press-able and the dials turn-able, but getting that power switch to slide and click like the real one... that is my favorite feature.

IGN: Are there other video game-based LEGO sets you'd like to work on in the future?

Carl Merriam: I am a big fan of video games. I think the LEGO brick offers so many opportunities, which is why I have always been a fan of the format. While I cannot talk about anything that we are currently working on, it is safe to say that if it’s made of LEGO bricks, I am excited to build anything.

Chris Reed is a commerce editor and deals expert for IGN. He also runs IGN's board game and LEGO coverage. You can follow him on Bluesky.

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