When it does not matter
The honest case for skipping the lights.
If the garage lives in a well-lit room, near a window, and the child’s play happens primarily during daylight hours — the lights will be invisible most of the time they are turned on. The LED strip in a bright room provides almost no visible effect. It is not wrong to have it, but it is not doing the work it was designed to do.
For a three-to-five-year-old who plays in the morning and afternoon and goes to bed before dark in winter: the lights are unlikely to be a meaningful part of the experience. The garage is still a great object. The lighting feature is simply not in play.
The cases where LED matters most are: older children (six and up) who stay up later and use the garage in low-light conditions; rooms with limited natural light; children with an active collecting or photographing habit; and the Neptune 94 specifically, where the car wash LED is a functional part of the play structure rather than ambient lighting.
A 91-slot garage without LED is still a complete garage. Every slot works. Every door opens. The name is still on the front. The absence of lighting does not make it a lesser piece — it makes it a piece optimized for a different room and a different child.

