Get some Celine Dion on your playlist and prepare to re-enact a few overwrought death scenes—a ridiculously detailed Lego recreation of the RMS Titanic has successfully gained enough support on Lego Ideas to be considered for production.

One of the biggest and most ambitious projects ever to hit the Ideas platform, which sees users submit their own kit concepts for voter approval, the Titanic is the work of designer Ssorg. It's his second success too, following his Douglas DC-3 model which also crossed the line back in March.

Having gained 10,000 votes of support, the Titanic set will now go through Lego's approval process, ensuring it meets the construction, design, and legal requirements to go into full production. However, unlike most previous successful projects, there's a slight uncertainty as to which version will be released.

Using Lego-specific CAD program MLCAD, Ssorg has created three different scale options for his plastic masterpiece. The smallest, and most recently added to the campaign page, is a still sizeable 750-piece offering, which measures 41.4cm long and splits in half for authentic sinking action—a design feature Ssorg says is "a little macabre, but many people have been asking for." The lower part of the hull is also detachable, allowing it to be displayed on a shelf as if it were at sea.

The medium scale one jumps in size considerably, measuring 60.4cm and consisting of circa 1250 pieces, while the pièce de résistance is a colossal 4000-piece monster, measuring 120.7cm (around four feet for the Imperially minded)—or about the height of an average six-year old. The larger ones don't have the grim splitting feature, but all three are remarkable recreations of the doomed cruise liner, with its signature angled funnels and incredible attention to detail on the deck layout.

Looking at past Ideas successes, such as the Lego Discworld set (designed by GlenBricker, rapidly becoming a celebrity on Lego Ideas and a collaborator with Ssorg on this set), it's most likely the smallest version will be the one to go into production if approved. The 4-foot Titanic would definitely be a conversation piece for the hardcore adult collector, though.

The period from approvals to release typically takes around a year, but whatever form this project might take hopefully will eventually hit store shelves—it'd be a shame for it to sink without a trace. (Sorry.)

This story originally appeared on WIRED UK.