lego star wars cloud city for sale

lego star wars cloud city for sale

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Lego Star Wars Cloud City For Sale

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Used & new (5) from $999.95 + $6.59 shipping Ships from and sold by DBG Trade. LEGO Star Wars: Cloud City Han Solo and Princess Leia have journeyed to Cloud City, only to discover it is an Imperial trap. Now Luke Skywalker must challenge Darth Vader to try and save his friends. This exciting set is based on one of the most famous locations from the original Star Wars trilogy. Recreate your favorite moments from Star Wars Episode V: The Empire Strikes Back, or create your own adventures. Includes Luke Skywalker, Darth Vader, Stormtrooper, Princess Leia, Han Solo, Boba Fett and an all-new Lando Calrissian mini-figure. The set is more than 25" in length and features four separate play areas. You can even blast Luke through the window and drop Hans into the carbonite. Han Solo and Princess Leia have journeyed to Cloud City, only to discover it is an Imperial trap! Now Luke Skywalker must challenge Darth Vader to try and save his friends! More than 25" in length! Incudes Luke Skywalker, Darth Vader, Princess Leia, Han Solo, Boba Fett, Stormtrooper and the all-new Lando Calrissian.




2.9 x 15.1 x 22.6 inches 4.2 pounds (View shipping rates and policies) Click here for Proposition 65 warning 10 years and up #580,475 in Toys & Games (See Top 100 in Toys & Games) #15,433 in Toys & Games > Building & Construction Toys > Building Sets Compare to Similar Items LEGO Star Wars Carbon-Freezing Chamber 75137 LEGO Star Wars Millennium Falcon 75105 Building Kit LEGO STAR WARS AT-ST Walker 75153 5 star80%4 star10%1 star10%See all verified purchase reviewsTop Customer ReviewsLego Star Wars: Cloud CityOne word: IncredibleWorth Every Penny!The greatest Star Wars Lego set ever? Serious Collectors have to have this in their collection ! Most Recent Customer ReviewsSearch Customer ReviewsBOBA FETT MINIFIGURE TOY STAR WARS BOUNTY HUNTER ROGUE ONE CUSTOM US SELLERLego Lobot from Set 9678 Twin-Pod Cloud Car & Bespin, City Star Wars NEW sw40010123 Cloud City is a Star Wars set released in 2003. This set was first released at the price of $99.99 in LEGO Shop At Home catalogs.




The set's features include a "working" carbon freezing chamber that lets you lower Han Solo downward and the carbonite back up replacing Han Solo, a sliding door, a window that catapults Luke Skywalker, and a Twin-Pod Cloud Car landing pad with many lime green studs for lights it. It was most notable for being the first appearance of a Lando Calrissian Minifigure. This set is also the only one released so far that has Lando in his most recognized clothing (the other being on 6210 Jabba's Sail Barge where he is in disguise). It also contains an exclusive Boba Fett Minifigure with normal printing, but also with armour plating on his arms, legs and on the belt. This set is for ages 9+ and contains 698 pieces. It was actually issued as a UCS.Do not modify it. Return to Cloud City™! Han Solo™ and Princess Leia™ have journeyed to Cloud City™, only to discover it is an Imperial trap! Now Luke Skywalker™ must challenge Darth Vader™ to try and save his friends! More than 25" in length!




7 mini-figures including Luke Skywalker, Darth Vader, Princess Leia, Han Solo, Boba Fett™, Stormtrooper™ and the all-new Lando Calrissian™ Four separate play areas including Landing Platform for the Twin Pod Cloud Car™ (sold separately as item #7119) Full Action Play: Blast Luke through the window! Drop Han into the carbonite! Based on one of the most famous locations from the original Star Wars™ trilogy, this set is the perfect addition to your Star Wars collection! Recreate your favorite moments from Star Wars™: Episode V The Empire Strikes Back, or create your own thrilling adventures! Lando CalrissianLuke Skywalker(Cloud City)Princess Leia(Cloud City)Han SoloBoba FettWhen it comes to movie-themed toy tie-ins, no film will ever compare to Star Wars. In the nearly four decades since the first film hit theaters, almost every character, vehicle, and location from the franchise has been made into a figure or playset, and kid and adult fans alike purchased—and continue to buy—as many as they could afford.




In honor of Star Wars Day, we decided to take a look at some of the figures that you may have owned that are now worth a fortune. To do so, we enlisted the help of the man who literally wrote the book on the subject: Mark Bellomo, toy expert, mental_floss contributor and author of The Ultimate Guide to Vintage Star Wars Action Figures 1977-1985 (among many, many other books on toys). Bellomo tells mental_floss that his love of the Star Wars universe began with the release of the first film in 1977; his connection to the toy line began the next year, when he got his first C-3PO figure. He now owns every vintage figure ever made, including the "impossible to find" Early Bird Certificate Package. With doubles and multiples of many figures and sets, Bellomo could not give a ballpark estimate of how many pieces are in his collection. Suffice it to say there are a lot, and some were harder to track down than others. "It took me two years to obtain a sealed bag of foam 'trash' for the Death Star Space Station playset," Bellomo says.




"As for crown jewels, I have about 150 to 250 mint on sealed card (MOSC) vintage Star Wars figures and a bunch of factory sealed playsets and vehicles, most of which never made it into The Ultimate Guide due to space restrictions." According to Bellomo, there's usually a spike in vintage Star Wars figure prices when there's a major media tie-in (new films, cartoons, or shows made available on streaming platforms), but it's also a case of limited supply and high demand; a lot of collectors want the toys, but the number of vintage figures is finite, which increases their value like a piece of fine art. Millions of figures have been produced over the years (the Kenner company shipped an estimated 250 million Star Wars figures by 1985), so what happened to most of them? "Think of it this way," Bellomo says. "How many people do you think would have bought a Star Wars figure in the spring of 1977 and saved it in its original packaging?" The answer is: Not very many, which is why mint condition versions of the 10 toys listed below are worth a fortune to collectors.




(And something to keep in mind: While the potential profits of selling these figures do sound impressive, they shouldn't be taken as a sign that we should all invest heavily in toys and wait for our dollars to multiply. "If you could go out right now and buy an action figure off the rack for $15, and turn around in a year and sell if for $30, everyone would be doing that," Bellomo says. "It doesn’t often work out that way.") Original Retail Price: $7.99Current Price Range: $675-$725+ (mint sealed in box) Standing 7.5-inches tall, this wheeled figure featured a secret compartment that opened to reveal an electronic circuit card and plans for the Death Star. The value of this figure is highly dependent on the color: The white plastic commonly turns yellow when exposed to sunlight or heat, so the whiter this 38-year-old R2 unit is, the more he's worth. Original Retail Price: $10.97Current Price Range: $1000-$1200+ (mint in sealed box) According to Bellomo’s book, this figure was based on the land speeder Luke drove in A New Hope , but there was another, smaller land speeder figure that was not controlled by the R2-D2 remote (“clicker”).




This version was only sold in J.C. Penney Christmas catalogs and cost $10.97, which is around $40 when adjusted for inflation. Paying that much for a toy in 1978 usually meant that it would leave the box, but the select few that remained untouched are now worth 100 times that high sticker price. Original Retail Price: $29.99Current Price Range: $3000-$3200+ (mint in sealed box) Slightly less menacing than the enormous Jawa Sandcrawler from Star Wars, this toy is still in high demand 37 years after its release, and 39 years since the vehicle first appeared on screen in Star Wars: A New Hope, Bellomo says. Even its removable pieces purchased alone are valuable: Elevator stairs and hatches can be found online for three times what the entire toy cost nearly four decades ago. Original Retail Price: $29.99Current Price Range: $2800-$3200 (mint in sealed box) Pieces on pieces on pieces! This playset had a number of removable components, including weapons, a cockpit canopy windshield, a game table, landing gear, a secret compartment, and a lightsaber training set like the one Luke uses in the film.




Finding all the pieces together is rare, but some sellers do offer accessories on their own. "With most '80s toys that possess a bevy of difficult-to-find accessories, more money can be made sometimes selling the toys piecemeal," Bellomo says. "With some vintage toys, an accessory or accoutrement may be worth more money than the entire shell/hull of the vehicle." Original Retail Price: $49.99Current Price Range: $825-$975+ (mint in sealed box) A taller AT-AT was released in 2010 with more features than its 1981 counterpart, but collectors still crave the original, which had a D battery compartment, clicking guns, and posable legs. Original Retail Price: $9.69Current Price Range: $1200-$1550+ (mint sealed in box) This rare set was sold only in the 1980 Sears Wish Book, so if your family belonged to that exclusive club, you may remember it. It came with a backdrop and four action figures: “Han Solo in his Bespin outfit, Lobot, Dengar, and Ugnaught.” This piece is valuable because the materials used to make it weren't necessarily built to last decades.




"Most exclusive Star Wars toys constructed out of chipboard are getting more and more difficult to obtain on the secondary market," Bellomo says. "Star Wars is a multi-generational global brand: Every aficionado wants to own one of each piece from the vintage Star Wars line ... The Sears exclusive Cloud City Playset is getting more difficult to find in decent condition—and more expensive, too." Original Retail Price: $16.99Current Price Range: $975-$1100+ (mint sealed in box) This Kenner toy came with several removable parts, including Han Solo in carbonite, a tinted canopy, stabilizer fins, and a cargo ramp. Many removable parts meant a high probability that they would go missing once the figures were opened, which is why collectors seek out sealed boxes. "If 100,000 Slave-1 toys survived the early '80s, maybe about five to 10 percent of the extant samples survived from 1981 to 1984 in good condition with labels intact and looking sharp," Bellomo says. "Maybe a quarter of that five to 10 percent are absolutely complete with all of the respective parts.




Most are missing the tinted canopy or the side hatch or the cargo ramp or the Han Solo in Carbonite Block accessory." Original Retail Price: $2.99Current Price Range: $2300 to $2600 When Bellomo wrote the prices for his guide between March and May of 2014, one of these mint condition figures in its original package (MOC, or "mint on card") was worth between $1250 and $1400—but the price has since skyrocketed because "it was produced in far fewer numbers, and the card artwork is uniquely different," he says. "Anything related to him is collectible." Boba Fett, who was first introduced (in animated form) in The Star Wars Holiday Special in 1978, remains one of the most popular characters in the Star Wars universe, and collectors are eager to obtain the gold-plated coin and jet black Imperial Blaster included with this figure. Original Retail Price: $2.99Current Price Range: $2600-$3000 The coin itself is worth $100 or more in mint condition, but owning the figure mint on card with the silver coin can mean a much nicer payday, depending on the condition of the packaging.

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