
Ever wanted to own a LEGO version of the PlayStation Portable? Well, now could be your chance to make your voice heard.
That's because a PSP fan called yakyah has just submitted an amazing 333-piece concept to the LEGO Ideas website (h/t: Retro Dodo), which replicates the handheld's iconic design, such as its shape, its D-pad, shoulder, and action buttons, and its 16:9 screen, as well as other smaller details such as the volume control on the side and its tiny yellow charging port.
The design is pitched as being "almost 1:1 to the... the PSP 1000," the original PSP launch model, and, according to its creator, uses "multiple slope pieces and SNOT bricks to capture the sleek complex curves of the PSP." There's even a removable disc tray included, too, featuring a recreation of a PSP demo disc, for good measure.
"During a trip back to my childhood home, I found my old PSP sitting in a box during some spring cleaning," Yakyah wrote, explaining the inspiration behind the design. "With it came a flood of happy memories. This drove me to start work on a recreation of the device as a decorative, interactive model to hopefully give fellow fans of this device a similar feeling as to what I felt.

They continued, "This build was made using Bricklink Studio, a digital LEGO building platform, without the use of 'illegal' building techniques. There are no collisions between bricks, and the internal structure is fully complete."
The design was first published on the LEGO Ideas site yesterday, April 1st, 2026, and currently has just 514 supporters, with the project having 424 days to hit its next milestone, which is set at 1000. In order to be considered for an official LEGO set, it will need a lot more support than that, with the ultimate target being 10,000 supporters.
To this day, the PlayStation Portable (or PSP, for short) still holds a lot of happy memories for those who were lucky enough to own one during its heyday, thanks to both its impressive library of games and its multimedia capabilities (such as the ability to play music and films and connect to the internet).
Arriving on the scene in 2004 (in Japan; North America, and PAL territories would have to wait until 2005 to get their hands on the device), it would be Sony's first foray into the handheld market with the PlayStation brand, and would see it go head to head with the market leader, Nintendo, and its own portable console, the Nintendo DS.
Ultimately, the Nintendo DS would far outsell the PSP, shifting 154 million units during its lifespan compared to the PSP's 82 million. But we certainly wouldn't call the PSP a failure because of that.
After all, the console is still fondly remembered decades later and put Sony in a position, where it felt comfortable releasing a follow-up, the PlayStation Vita, in 2011 (again, NA and PAL would have to wait an additional year), and was home to tons of incredible games, including Metal Gear Solid: Peace Walker, God of War: Ghost of Sparta, Final Fantasy Tactics: The War of the Lions, Grand Theft Auto: Vice City Stories, Daxter, Persona 3 Portable; the list is endless.
If you want to see this LEGO PSP concept become a reality, you can vote here.