A viral Reddit post is reigniting online anger against return scams after a Star Wars Lego box, and its labeled bags were found to be filled with pasta instead of actual LEGO pieces. Per Daily Dot, this isn’t just a funny mix-up; it’s sparked a huge discussion about a tricky scam that’s been hitting online shoppers for a while now.
Redditor r/Bernardowss shared a photo on Tuesday, showing their brand-new Star Wars Venator-Class Attack Cruiser box wide open, revealing five bags of raw penne pasta where the LEGO bricks should have been. “Ordered a new Lego set, got dinner instead,” the original poster joked, which, honestly, is a pretty good way to handle such a frustrating situation.
Once it was confirmed that the set came from Amazon, other Redditors quickly connected the dots. The prevailing theory, and it’s a pretty common one, is that someone previously bought the LEGO set, carefully removed all the blocks, and then replaced them with an equivalent weight of pasta. The goal is to trick the returns process and get a full refund without actually returning the original item. You can imagine how annoying this is for the next unsuspecting customer.
Oh my gosh, I would lose my mind if that happened to me
Many believe these scammers take advantage of the fact that, with so many packages moving through, Amazon’s warehouse staff might not always have the time or resources to check every returned item. One Redditor, r/harriswatchsbrnntc, even pointed out the “added indignity of reusing the Lego bags,” which is pretty diabolical if you ask me.
This pasta-for-LEGO switcheroo isn’t a new phenomenon. In December 2025, TikToker @lindsayharlak reportedly found something similar in a LEGO box bought from Target. Earlier that same year, another Redditor, r/MtHove, opened their set only to discover a single plastic bag full of spiral pasta. In 2024, someone on Facebook received a baffling mix of LEGOs and noodles.
The theory is that pasta has a similar weight to Lego bricks and even makes a similar rattling sound when shaken, making it harder to detect without actually opening the box. An Amazon reseller commented on the recent Reddit post, sharing their own experiences. “My brother and I sell Legos on Amazon and from time to time we get very expensive Lego sets returned to us just filled with cereal or all the mini figs ripped out,” wrote u/bigbobo33.
Redditors came out in force with jokes to deal with the frustrating situation. “There’s a Lego set that’s really gonna require you to use your noodle,” quipped r/Gutter_Snoop. Perhaps the most entertaining part of this whole debacle is that the moderators of r/mildlyinfuriating removed the post, asking the poster to put it in r/extremelyinfuriating instead.
While the poster saw the humor here, most scams are upsetting, whether it is a person impersonating a kids influencer or trying to rent someone else’s house. Hopefully, r/Bernardowss just gets the LEGO model he wanted.
Published: Mar 14, 2026 10:45 am