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    Home»Technology»Lego unveils tech-filled Smart Bricks
    Technology

    Lego unveils tech-filled Smart Bricks

    Team_Benjamin Franklin InstituteBy Team_Benjamin Franklin InstituteJanuary 6, 2026No Comments4 Mins Read
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    Shiona McCallum,Senior technology reporter, CES in Las Vegas,

    Liv McMahonand

    Emma Calder,Technology reporters

    AFP via Getty Images A close-up of a hand constructing a lit-up Lego Smart Brick on a set of pink, blue and green Lego blocks.AFP via Getty Images

    Lego has unveiled Smart Bricks – tech-filled versions of its small building blocks – which it says will bring sets to life with sound, light and reaction to movement.

    However, the new product range is causing unease among play experts, who say it risks undermining what makes Lego special for children in an increasingly digital world.

    Announced at the Consumer Electronics Show (CES) 2026 in Las Vegas, the Danish toymaker’s Smart Play system introduces new electronic components to the classic plastic blocks.

    Lego says its new tech-enabled products, launching in March with a new Star Wars set, are its “most revolutionary innovation” in nearly 50 years.

    But Josh Golin, executive director of children’s wellbeing group Fairplay, believes Smart Bricks “undermine what was once great about Legos” – harnessing children’s own imagination during play.

    “As anyone who has ever watched a child play with old-school Legos knows, children’s Lego creations already do move and make noises through the power of children’s imaginations,” he told the BBC.

    “But with the release of Smart Bricks, Lego is taking play out of the hands of children and putting it into the tiny sensors of these so-called ‘smart’ devices.”

    Andrew Manches, professor of children and technology at the University of Edinburgh, agreed the beauty of Lego lay in “the freedom to create, re-create, and adapt simple blocks into endless stories powered by children’s imagination”.

    But he also welcomed Lego’s efforts to integrate physical and digital play with tools that react to the way children interact with its Smart Play products.

    Julia Goldin, the company’s chief product and marketing officer, previously told the BBC it viewed digital technology as an opportunity to “expand physical play and physical building”.

    “We don’t look at the digital world as a threat,” she said – adding its smart range weaves interactivity “seamlessly” with its physical products.

    What are Lego Smart Bricks?

    Lego says its Smart Bricks can sense motion, position and distance, allowing the models to respond in various ways during play.

    Measuring 2×4, the brick itself contains sensors, lights, a small sound synthesiser, an accelerometer and a custom-made silicon chip enabling it to detect movement and react to it.

    But it is designed to be used with Smart Minifigures and Smart Tags tiles – two additional products making up Lego’s Smart Play System.

    Similarly adapted from existing Lego components, these possess digital identifiers triggering different sounds or reactions when they detect and interact with each other.

    For instance, when tried out by the BBC at CES, a Lego birthday cake recognised when its “candles” were blown out – sounding a cheer and a happy birthday song.

    Meanwhile, a Lego helicopter made whooshing sounds when moved or rotated, with its Smart Brick lighting up red upon crashing.

    The Smart Minifigure, Smart Brick and Smart Tag shown together resting on the palm of someone's hand.

    Using a wireless system developed by Lego, the three models communicate with each other to produce particular responses through the Smart Brick.

    Tom Donaldson, head of Lego’s Creative Play Lab, said the tech intended to respond to children’s actions and complement the way they naturally play.

    He said the Smart Brick’s reactions to responses would “hopefully inspire and surprise the user to keep them continuing to play”.

    “We are building a platform that we want to last for many years,” he said.

    Prof Manches told the BBC reduced cost and size of components has “enabled more toymakers to integrate digital technology seamlessly into a range of toys”.

    But he added despite exciting innovation, concerns remain about the security and privacy of new and emerging smart toys for children – particularly those which integrate AI.

    “The key is to us all to remain critically reflective of the design of these toys, and to pay much attention to how they influence children’s everyday lives,” he said.

    It is not the first time Lego has dabbled in digital experimentation or sought to appeal to increasingly online audiences.

    Since 2017 it has released augmented reality apps and experiences letting people play with computer-generated models layered over their surroundings.

    Through collaborations with video game publishers such as Nintendo and Fortnite-maker Epic Games it has also looked to appeal to fans of trending games or new launches – releasing a Super Mario Minifigure in 2020 with a tiny display screen.

    Lego chief executive Niels B. Christiansen said in the firm’s 2024 annual report it had accelerated spending on digital technology as a “strategic area” for the company.

    A green promotional banner with black squares and rectangles forming pixels, moving in from the right. The text says: “Tech Decoded: The world’s biggest tech news in your inbox every Monday.”



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