
The moon landing happened in 1969. Tintin got there in 1954. That’s the kind of detail that makes you stop, reconsider, and immediately want to tell someone about it. Hergé, the Belgian cartoonist behind The Adventures of Tintin, published Destination Moon and its sequel Explorers on the Moon in the early 1950s, a good fifteen years before Neil Armstrong ever set foot on the lunar surface. What makes that even more remarkable is how seriously Hergé took the science behind it. He corresponded with space experts, commissioned a physical rocket model to verify its accuracy, and drew every last detail with a level of rigor that would feel at home in an aerospace manual. The rocket he designed, that now-iconic red-and-white checkered tower, wasn’t just a narrative prop. It was a genuine vision of what a moon mission could look like, built from the best technical knowledge available at the time.
And now LEGO has turned it into 1,283 bricks. The LEGO Ideas Tintin Moon Rocket (Set #21367) is available now, priced at $159.99, and it is exactly as satisfying as you’d want it to be. Standing at 49cm tall with the red-and-white checkered pattern faithfully recreated in brick form, it works beautifully as a display piece, which is clearly the whole point. This is part of LEGO’s Ideas line, designed for adults 18 and up, and it carries that same particular energy as the Botanical Collection or the vintage typewriter set: you build it once, and then it earns a permanent spot on your shelf.
Designer: LEGO


The set includes six figures, Tintin, Captain Haddock, Professor Calculus, the twin detectives Thomson and Thompson, all in detailed space suits with helmets and oxygen tanks, plus Snowy. There’s also a removable panel on the nose cone that opens to reveal a miniature control room inside. That’s the kind of considered detail that makes a $159 price tag feel reasonable rather than indulgent.


But the more interesting story is really about the design of the rocket itself. The checkered pattern on Hergé’s original wasn’t just a visual choice. It was a functional one. The two-tone design was rooted in actual aerospace practice, used to track a rocket’s roll and rotation during launch. Hergé based the rocket’s overall silhouette on the German V-2, the most advanced rocket technology the world had seen at that point, developed under Wernher von Braun’s direction during World War II. The full-circle irony is that von Braun, the man whose V-2 work first inspired Hergé’s fictional rocket, later became NASA’s chief rocket architect and was instrumental in developing the Saturn V that carried Apollo 11 to the actual Moon. Fiction and history were chasing each other the whole time, and somehow Tintin was always a step ahead.



This is also the first LEGO Tintin set ever made, which, given how culturally massive the franchise is, feels like it took longer than it should have. Over two dozen albums, translations into dozens of languages, a presence spanning continents and generations. The set started as a fan submission from Portuguese designer Alexis Dos Santos, known online as Tkel86, who put it through the LEGO Ideas community voting process before it reached full production. That origin story is fitting. Tintin has always been driven by devotion rather than obligation.



The LEGO Ideas line has a reliable instinct for picking the right icons, and the Tintin Moon Rocket belongs here. It works on multiple levels at once: a display piece that’s genuinely beautiful, a nostalgic touchstone for anyone who grew up with the comics, and a design artifact with a richer backstory than most people expect. The checkered pattern that looks so striking on a shelf today is the same pattern that was quietly grounded in real rocket science more than seventy years ago. For anyone who appreciates when design, history, and storytelling land in the same object, this one is absolutely worth your attention.

The post LEGO Finally Gives Tintin’s Moon Rocket Its Brick-Built Moment first appeared on Yanko Design.


























