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Jason Momoa Is LEGO's New Playmaker for World Play Day

The Aquaman star storms a brick-built boardroom to lead LEGO's "Never Stop Playing" push against a global family play deficit.

By DUBAI2 min read
Jason Momoa Is LEGO's New Playmaker for World Play Day
Cover: @legolanddubai/Instagram
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  • 1Jason Momoa is LEGO's newest Playmaker, fronting the global "Never Stop Playing" campaign ahead of World Play Day on June 11, 2026.
  • 2The hero film, created by Our LEGO Agency and directed by Emmy winner Rhys Thomas, sees Momoa pitch the case for play from a boardroom built entirely of LEGO bricks.
  • 3LEGO's Play Well Study 2026 surveyed 45,000 people across 30 countries and found nearly 89% of parents wish they played more with their children.
  • 4Around 9% of families more than 60 million globally report not playing together at all, while five-plus hours of weekly play boosts happiness and wellbeing.
  • 5World Play Day marks LEGO's annual celebration of the UN's International Day of Play, now in its eleventh consecutive year.

Forget Atlantis. Forget superheroes. Forget saving the world. Jason Momoa LEGO World Play Day is officially making headlines after the actor took on one of the most unexpected roles of his career: becoming LEGO's newest Playmaker ahead of World Play Day 2026. And yes, it involves a boardroom made entirely of LEGO bricks.

The actor is leading LEGO's new "Never Stop Playing" campaign, a global initiative designed to tackle what the company calls a growing "play deficit" among families worldwide. Through the campaign, LEGO hopes to inspire families to reconnect through creativity, imagination, and hands-on play.

LEGO Put Jason Momoa in a Boardroom Made of Bricks

The campaign's hero film drops Momoa into a fully LEGO-built corporate boardroom, where he delivers a wildly entertaining presentation on why adults and children alike need to play more.

Created by Our LEGO Agency and directed by Emmy Award-winning director Rhys Thomas, the campaign leans heavily into comedy, absurdity, and corporate parody. Imagine a keynote presentation. Now imagine it completely falling apart inside a room made of LEGO bricks. That is basically the vibe.

According to LEGO, the campaign marks the brand's first major global initiative built entirely around comedy while promoting creativity, imagination, and family connection.

The Numbers Behind the Jason Momoa LEGO Campaign Are Surprisingly Serious

While the campaign looks playful on the surface, the research behind it paints a different picture. LEGO's Play Well Study 2026 surveyed 45,000 people across 30 countries and found that nearly 89% of parents wish they played more with their children.

Even more surprising, around 9% of families reported not playing together at all, a figure LEGO says represents more than 60 million families globally. The study also found that families who spend more than five hours a week playing together report significantly higher levels of happiness and wellbeing than those who spend less than two hours.

Why Jason Momoa Said Yes

For Momoa, the campaign connects directly to his own childhood. He credited his mother for encouraging imagination, creativity, exploration, and hands-on play while growing up.

According to campaign materials, Momoa believes play is far more than entertainment. He describes it as a critical tool that helps children build confidence, solve problems, strengthen relationships, and develop creativity. In the campaign, he champions what LEGO calls the "5 Ps" of play: resilience, collaboration, problem-solving, confidence, and creativity.

World Play Day Is Coming

The campaign leads into World Play Day on June 11, LEGO's annual celebration of the UN's International Day of Play. For the eleventh consecutive year, LEGO employees around the world will pause work and dedicate time to play as part of the initiative.

The company is also encouraging families to join in by participating in activities and building together throughout the day.

The Bottom Line

LEGO could have launched another toy campaign. Instead, it put Jason Momoa inside a brick-built boardroom and gave him one mission: convince the world to play more. Somehow, it works.

And if the campaign succeeds, June 11 might become the one day adults finally stop pretending they're too busy to have fun.

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Written by

Julie Buere

Reporting from Dubai — independent, on the ground, and built on local sources.