On a quiet birthday, a gift arrived that stunned him—a pristine Lego Star Wars Republic Gunship, a treasure from 2008, wrapped in nostalgia and unspoken generosity. His friend, though not wealthy, went beyond means to honor a shared passion, offering more than just a present but a symbol of deep appreciation and friendship.
Yet, when the gift was unboxed and displayed with its tiny minifigures, the friend’s excitement faltered, shadowed by the fear of lost value. But for him, true worth lay not in preservation or price, but in the joy of holding history in his hands and breathing life into memories that were meant to be lived.

AITA for opening and using a 2008 Lego Star Wars set I got for my birthday that cost my friend a couple hundred dollars?











As renowned researcher Dr. Brené Brown explains, “Boundaries are the distance at which I can love you and me simultaneously.” This situation highlights a clash in boundaries regarding ownership, use, and perceived value. The friend invested significant resources based on the OP’s known fandom, likely intending the gift to be a valuable, perhaps even archival, possession. The OP, however, values experiential utility over monetary or collector preservation, which is a perfectly valid personal philosophy.
The core issue lies in the unstated expectations surrounding a high-value, rare gift. While the OP legally owns the item and has the right to interact with it as they see fit, opening a rare, potentially appreciating asset without discussing it first can feel like a violation of the donor’s implied wish, especially when the donor expressed shock or disappointment. The friend’s motivation appears rooted in a collector’s mindset where rarity equals untouchable value; the OP’s motivation is in experiential value, where use equals true worth.
The OP was not the asshole for opening the set, as it was their gift, but the ensuing conflict suggests a failure in communication about the item’s status. In the future, when receiving a gift that is explicitly rare or expensive, the OP should acknowledge the dual value (monetary/collector vs. use) with the giver and establish expectations—perhaps by asking, “I love this so much, but I know it’s rare. Are you okay if I display it opened?”
THE COMMENTS SECTION WENT WILD – REDDIT HAD *A LOT* TO SAY ABOUT THIS ONE.


















The original poster (OP) is facing a conflict between their personal value of using and enjoying gifts, regardless of cost or collectible status, and their friend’s expectation that expensive, rare items like a vintage Lego set should be preserved in mint, unopened condition for monetary value.
Given the friend’s clear disappointment and the significant expense involved, is the OP’s right to use a gift they received absolute, or does the nature of a very expensive, rare collectible introduce an obligation to honor the donor’s implied intent regarding its preservation?







