Adults driving surge in toy sales as ‘kidult’ trend grows

d01tg0d0wn

Well-Known Member

From teddy bears and Lego bricks to trading cards and Star Wars figurines, a new trend is reshaping the toy industry: consumers over the age of 12, dubbed “kidults,” are purchasing products that celebrate their inner child through nostalgia.

The Canadian toy market grew by up to seven per cent in the first half of 2025, with kidults fuelling much of that momentum, according to Andrew Wagar, spokesperson for the Canadian Toy Association.

“Much of this growth is being fueled by consumers over the age of 12, who are consistently outspending traditional under-12 demographics when it comes to toy purchases,” Wagar, president and CEO of Swerve Strategic Marketing, said in an email to CTVNews.ca.

He says the trend largely took off during the COVID-19 pandemic, when many people needed distractions and comfort during lockdowns. That demand, he adds, never really dropped off.

“During the pandemic is when you started to see collectibles … start to really grow in popularity,” he said in a separate video interview with CTVNews.ca. “People started going online (and) collecting. This whole nostalgia started to take off, and that’s when it really became popular.”

Karthik Rajendran, head of collectibles at eBay Canada, has witnessed the trend first-hand.

“It does have quite a varying range when you look at it from an age perspective,” Rajendran said in a video interview with CTVNews.ca. “But at the core, really, it’s getting people to reconnect with a time in their past or something nostalgic that they remember from their childhood.”

Rajendran says search trends on eBay point to surging demand for specific toys and franchises.

PDGTJMMZKFCBXGIU6VWY3EC3BY.jpg
Melissa Brooks performs at a Labubu themed rave at Area15, a retail and entertainment complex, Friday, Aug. 1, 2025, in Las Vegas. (John Locher/AP)
“Labubu I think is one of the biggest things in recent times,” he said. “Just on eBay itself, between the months of May and June, the Labubu searches were among the top three.”

Pokémon and Pokémon cards came on top. Rajendran also pointed to upcoming trends.

“Bratz is a great example, obviously with the release of the Jean Paul Gaultier doll recently, but also the movie coming out with Kim Kardashian,” Rajendran said. “Pokemon is going to see a big revival next year … so that’ll be a big (one) for 2026.”

What are ‘kidults’ buying?​

According to data from U.S. research firm Circana, shared by Wagar, the top toy categories among adults include:

  • Trading card games
  • Building sets and blocks
  • Action figures and collectibles
  • Entertainment-licensed products
“Lego is probably the number one company that you would look at,” Wagar said, adding Pokémon, the National Football League, Marvel, Hot Wheels, and Star Wars are also very successful in the kidult category.

“Pokemon is, without question, the number one selling trading card in Canada, possibly most likely in the world,” he said.

Toy companies are adapting to the new consumer base. Wagar says brands are moving from seasonal campaigns aimed at parents to year-round strategies targeting adult fans.

“We’re seeing new companies emerge that focus exclusively on products for this segment, while established players are introducing dedicated kidult lines or expanding evergreen franchises to capture this growing market,” he said.

‘A trip down memory lane’​

Psychologists say the trend taps into deeper emotional needs.

“A lot of these things have a community around them,” said psychologist Steve Joordens in a video interview with CTVNews.ca. “It gives (people) a group of people that they can talk to about something they like talking to.”

Joordens says play, often dismissed in adulthood, can help manage stress and improve well-being.

“It’s really important to be able to flush (negative hormones caused by stress) and the best way to do that is to not just escape the stress, but to spend some time doing something that makes you feel good and happy,” he said.

Dr. Chloe Carmichael, a clinical psychologist and author, says the kidult trend may also reflect shifting social dynamics.

C7NX6JJNRNH4BJWDRZRLZJQXAY.jpg
Visitors view LEGO skyscrapers at Telus World of Science, in Vancouver, on Thursday, July 23, 2020. (DARRYL DYCK/THE CANADIAN PRESS)
“In the past, there were very clear markers and milestones of maturity that carried their own literal sense of status,” Carmichael said in a video interview with CTVNews.ca. “Now it’s almost a little bit of a taboo to ... market those types of milestones. What’s old and in the past may feel a little bit more comforting.”

Carmichael noted that while connecting with your past can be positive, problems arise if nostalgia becomes an escape from adult responsibilities.

“There’s a big difference between a trip down memory lane and setting up residence on memory lane,” she said. “When it becomes kind of a fixation that seems to permeate throughout their whole life ... that would be something, as a psychologist, I would at least begin to ask questions about.”
---------------------------------------------
each to their own i guess but is kinda disturbing and indicitive of why our society is falling apart

What say you to this so called trend?

Personally as much as i want to be critical to this information i do collect the odd thing i suppose that could be considered an adult toy but none in the list above. More like collectors items for my basement where my enterainment stuff is. Random things that are interesting or novel. Kids occasionally will break them because they play with em but i dont really care because its what kids do and if i really wanted to keep that stuff safe i would hide it away. If i hide it away then whats the point of collecting it if you cant see it? Anyway i am rambling so i will just post this and be done

Anyone collecting stuff or did you grow up and most your toys are the kind for your age like cars, bikes, art, maybe an anologue audio system with those tubes to control the sound like some ppls do and might talk about all the time or you can count on them talking about it all the time as well as showing you their vuccum tube collections like everywhere you go and everytime you go to their home or work cubicle to the point you avoid said person in the hallways at your work place or wont ride the elevator with because they wont shut up about their audio system and all their tubes they collect and that they have on order of tubes comin that will be arriving at the office and not their home cause why wait till you get home and you cant remember their name no more because you panic and call the person the tube man but you need to remember their name cause you have a meeting comin up with them but all you see is damn tubes and hope the tube man will see one day soon that no one wants to know about or talk about his audio system or his tube collection not because we dont care but because well we dont care like he does
 
Last edited:
Upvote 22
What is this labubu I’ve been seeing mentioned? I don’t want to sully myself actually looking it up.
 
View previous replies…
View previous replies…
We have board game night, play video games still and I love watching cartoons to this day.

It’s my escape from clown world.
 
Depends which type of those, though.
Cartoons, i love the classic bugs bunny and daffy duck type cartoons.
Board games are fun and have always been for all-ages, not just kids. Same for video games.

Those are a lot different than playing with hot wheels or lego or watching My Little Pony.
 
So is playing with trains weird too then? I don’t see why Lego or hot wheels is any weirder than doing the train thing with landscapes taking up a whole room.

I used to watch my little pony. I haven’t watched the new stuff, not sure how different it is to be a “problem”. Or is the problem the mentally ill folks who can’t just watch it but must become it? That’s really not the cartoons fault eh.

I watch mostly old school cartoons. Count duckula is one of my favs. But I also like American dad though I haven’t watched any of the more recent episodes. What about Care Bears? Is Care Bears approved by the adults in the room? Cos hubby and I are thinking about watching the Care Bears Star Trek season lol
 
So they’re saying enjoying Lego makes you a childish adult? Why can’t I just enjoy my plastic building bricks in peace? Even boomers like to hoard memorabilia from old TV shows and movies and other shit.


View: https://youtu.be/95_33ItUC9k?feature=shared
 
I can't think of too many old-man equivalents to this -- maybe building model trains comes closest? It seems to be mostly among Millennials and those who are younger
 
I can understand the desire to keep old treasures from your youth, they evoke memories of a time before you were dead inside.

I would say however, it's far more likely that they are just buying whatever the smartphone tells them to buy. They grew up watching toy ads like GI Joe and He-Man and the advertising is still going on to this day.

Now excuse me, there's a Delicious and Refreshing can of Coca-Cola in my fridge and I feel compelled to consume it now.
 
You can put people in three categories for this:

1. Majority millennials and younger all think economy is fake and stock market is even more fake(specially after GME). They prefer to have something that has perceived value that can not be taken away. They can later resale for bigger value in a couple of years.
2. Due to break down of religion, nation, community, and even family. People are reaching out for anything has some sort of meaning or they can participate in a false-community.
3. They centered their identities around their consumption due to nothing else in society providing of actual value for them.

Keep in mind this how the comic books and baseball cards were until they massively dumped in value. Something similar going to happen with this market.
 
Last edited:
Article has merit as on my floor i know 2 lego guys that are bat shit crazy 4 that stuff and there are ladies that collect those stuffies and put em around their cubicle and in some cases have even played with them with other stuffy collector ladies. Dont u just love when ladies talk in baby voices and play with stuffies?
 
@RightOfSask In defense of buying warhammer miniatures, they serve a purpose outside of just mindless consumerism. They are basically art projects you have to put together and paint. After that, you get to use them in tabletop games.
If he's just buying models without buliding and painting, then yeah, hes no better than them.
 
Not gonna lie, I’ve got more than one action figure from stuff I liked as a kid. I still watch anime since I grew up on it, and I still play video games. Just because you’re an adult doesn’t mean you gotta act like some uptight retard.
 
I've played video games off and on for about 42 years, ever since the coin-op arcade days, and I'm probably the oldest person who actually does -- most people I know in their late fifties and beyond absolutely despise them because they didn't grow up with them. I haven't really been indulging over the past couple of years but one of my kids bought both an Xbox One and a PS4 recently, so I'm getting tempted again... I'll probably wait until the dead of winter, though, when there's nothing else to do around here
 
Not really a new trend; adults have been buying Lego sets, collecting trading cards, building trains in their basement, playing vidya etc since I was a child in the 80s. I remember specifically the RC scene, especially planes was dominated by adults…likely because back then it was BIG money
 
My guilty obsession is Stiga hockey tables and teams.

Kids and i really enjoy a game here and there and so far i still am the house champ but things are changing quickly
 
I don't know I helped my nephew build a Lego thing one time I'm not going to lie I found the shit kind of relaxing.

I wouldn't do it myself but I can't lie I guess just concentrating on the task at hand was just relaxing.

I guess I need to become a real man my Lego sets are now two by fours other lumber projects. Well not really cuz I don't have anywhere to do that shit but I wouldn't mind getting into it.

Even though wood is still fucking expensive after covid. It was funny when they said oh my God wood is going down in price yeah it's dropped like 30% but it went up like 600 fucking percent.
 
I'm glad I kept my NES, N64, old lego, train set, dinky cars, marbles, game boy etc. Now that I have kids I get to play with it all over again with them and pass on a bit of a 80's/90's to them. During covid I bought every NES game I ever rented off of ebay for cheap.
 
"When I was a child, I spake as a child, I understood as a child, I thought as a child: but when I became a man, I put away childish things."

It's not so much the childish things I mind as the childish thought, speech and understanding.
 
I totally buy the hot wheels for my 3 year old and definitely do not buy any cool ones secretly for myself.

I also totally wanted to buy the knight rider playmobil set for him and not because of how cool I thought it was.

Seriously though, id feel like a big loser if I was buying toys for myself without a kid to "buy" them for.
 
idk...starting to think that those trading card games aren't such a bad investment

1756159917919.png
 
As some who sold off his Magic collection a few years back. That $100 unlimited Black Lotus my mom got mad at me buying turned out real good.

Same with all the $5-10 dual lands from unlimited.
 
Back
Top