Culture Why everyone is obsessed with Labubu and where to find these collectibles in Minnesota - Must CONSOOM 2025 Beanie Babies!

https://www.startribune.com/why-eve...ind-these-collectibles-in-minnesota/601380207
https://archive.is/eBP5T
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Yailine Rosas, 13, showed off a Labubu named Dada she’d acquired at Rosedale on June 26, 2025, a few days after striking out. “They’re really addicting, because when you start buying one, you want more and more,” she said. (Jerry Holt/The Minnesota Star Tribune)

Osirys Oliva and Jonathan Martinez got to Rosedale Center at 5:30 a.m. on Thursday to secure the first spots in one of two lines queued up in the rain. Four hours later, when the doors opened, they rushed toward two vending machines inside the Roseville shopping mall, with dozens of other line-waiters right behind.

Welcome to ground zero for Minnesota’s Labubu collectible-accessory craze.

Never heard of Labubu? The stuffed toys combine Hello Kitty’s cartoon cuteness, with Gremlin-like menace and the collectability of Beanie Babies. In the speculative spirit of Pokémon cards and claw machines, they’re sold in “blind boxes‚” so purchasers don’t know which one they’ll get.
Not that Labubu are easy to acquire.

Oliva, 22, had seen the stuffed creatures on TikTok this winter, and at first thought they were “creepy little things that people were obsessed with.” Eventually, the internet wore her down. “I just kept seeing them over and over, and I hopped on the trend.”

Labubu’s big-eyed, scary-sweet aesthetic — think: evil Care Bears, or if Yoshitomo Nara illustrated “Where the Wild Things Are?” — seems a bit edgy for mainstream virality.

And yet, Labubu fandom ranges from Hollywood A-listers to middle-school dean’s listers, who hang the little monsters from belt loops and bags.
Why are folks paying $30 or more for tchotchkes in the face of economic uncertainty? Some speculate that the Labubu craze reflects the “lipstick effect” theory — that consumers who can’t afford big-ticket items during a financial crisis still splurge by treating themselves to more small luxuries — and signals that a recession is ahead.’

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Izzy Menton and Braedyn Swanson, right, waited under an umbrella outside Rosedale Center hoping to buy Labubu dolls from the unstaffed vending machines. (Jerry Holt/The Minnesota Star Tribune)

What are Labubu?​

Back in 2015, the Hong Kong-born, Netherlands-raised artist Kasing Lung created a picture book trilogy called “The Monsters,” influenced by Norse myths. Among the magical monsters in the series, the main character was the mischievous Labubu.

As is the natural evolution in our merch-obsessed culture, Monsters figurines ensued. Confusingly, the toys are generally referred to as Labubu, even though there are multiple characters named things like Tycoco, Zimomo and Mokoko.

The figures became popular when they were picked up by the Chinese toy seller Pop Mart, which operates retail shops and vending machines worldwide. (Its billionaire founder was recently named the 10th richest man in China.)

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But Labubu went viral last year, when K-pop star Lisa from Blackpink started clipping Labubu keychains to her bags. Since then, all sorts of celebs — Rihanna, Lizzo, Cher, David Beckham — have been flexing their furry fashion accessories.

The charms’ popularity has spawned the inevitable Labubu-related crimes, a thriving resale market, and someone spending more than $150,000 for a human-sized one at auction. Counterfeit Labubus are known as “Lafufus,” and collectors check for authenticity by scanning the toys’ QR code tags, shining a blacklight on their feet and examining their teeth.
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A few customers bought other toys from the Pop Mart vending machines at Rosedale Center on Thursday, June 26, after being disappointed they did not contain any Labubu. (Jerry Holt/The Minnesota Star Tribune)

Finding Labubu in Minnesota​

The creatures can be tricky to hunt down

Pop Mart’s website is sold out on the regular. And acquiring a Labubu at the Rosedale vending machines, which are Minnesota’s only Pop Mart outlets, is really a gambler’s gamble.

Pop Mart is tight-lipped about its approach to restocking and the number of Labubu varies day to day. Sometimes one machine has Labubu and the other does not. And the company doesn’t limit purchases, so the first person in line could empty the machine.

Adults have been known to show up at Rosedale with backpacks and wipe out all the inventory, which many Labubu fans find egregious. “I would like to do that, but I would not,” Martinez said, “because I would feel bad for everybody.”

Unfortunately, Martinez and Oliva didn’t get the chance. Neither machine had been restocked with Labubu. “Nothing?” a fan cried when she saw the empty trays. “So sad,” another added.

Beyond Rosedale, Labubu can be purchased at Asian stores at the Mall of America (including Ebisu and Ta-Da-Daa) or won at claw-machine arcades such as Duck! in Eagan. But one Reddit commenter warned others about going the gaming route: “I am ashamed of how much money I spent to get the cheapest Labubu there.”
 
Never heard of them.
I always wonder if crazes like these are artificially created and used to model certain infectious behaviours
Honestly, at this point, it is not a conspiracy theory anymore. These articles are made to artificially hype up shit regular people never heard of all the time, and then there will always be those that got on the trend first that will benefit the most. It’s like insider trading, but on tangible object instead.
 
They look evil to me. And they're not being bought by the "teehee so evil" crowd, they're being bought by normies. Yet another phase of the "turn everything innocent and nice into something evil and ugly" campaign we've seen everywhere.

Make people think obvious indicators of aggression are actually cute! That'll make those gen alpha kids understand why immigrants are the lifeblood of our nation.
 
Addictive. This annoys me
People use "addicting" because "addictive" has strongly negative connotations. It's associated with harmful overconsumption.

But of course, these people don't have a problem. They could stop any time. It's totally normal to roam the earth, standing in lines in the rain to get a cheap plastic piece of shit you'll put on a shelf and never look at again just so you can get a dopamine hit when you buy it. It's just harmless fun!

Thus, they are addicting, not addictive.
 
Don't really see the unique selling point there. They look like literally every other soft toy that gawks at me from the shelves these days, like the Plushie Pets or those soulless Littlest Pet Shop things:
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But granted, as far as monster-themed plushies go, Labubus really are an improvement over seeing those Poppy Playtime abominations being sold everywhere:
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I never thought I'd find myself pulling a Hillary when I say that I La-Don't-Care.

I didn't go nuts with any of the other Junk of the Year stuff they tried to push on people - Tamagotchis, Furbies, Beanie Babies, Fidget Spinners, Funko Pops, Shopkins, plenty more I forget. It's just more junk you don't need plus Booster Pack Addiction.
 
I was around for that too, and my mom got me Beanie Babies too. It really is exactly like it haha.
LMAO my family found a massive sacks of Beanie Babies in the attic a few weeks ago and we learned that Mom would take extended lunch breaks in the mid to late 1990s to run to the one store in town that got them first.

I'll say we have a first run Snort the Bull along with a few rare ones..... So once we get those up on eBay I'll be retiring early 😆

My Mom can also NEVER make fun of my autistic hobbies/collections now either lol
 
looks like another toy craze has dropped. Good on them for finding a winning formula. They try all the time but never get to hello kitty levels of success. These character product streams are numerous and equally asinine. But they appeal to teenage girls, who would theme all of their accessories with merch of their favorite blue bear with wings floating on a cloud or some shit like that.

And yeah I'd totally be that one adult cleaning out the vending machine and then reselling them on ebay for double.
 
You’re just out of touch, old man. Buy! Buy! BUY! Material goods are the root of happiness!
Do not seek knowledge, wisdom or inner strength! Seek plastic and nylon crap made in a Chinese sweatshop! And if you don’t get the one you want… BUY MORE!
I'll continue yelling at clouds, thank you very much!


Eventually, the internet wore her down. “I just kept seeing them over and over, and I hopped on the trend.”
"I proved what a good little consooooomer goyim I am!"


or dies out after summer like fucking fidget spinners
I actually still have a couple rather hefty ones, but then again I'm probably in the target market. If I'm bored I like getting them up to rather dangerous speeds.


At least with the tumblers, you could drink out of them once they lost their value.
Except weren't they found to be tainted with lead in a few runs? So you couldn't even drink out of them. :story:
 
Honestly, at this point, it is not a conspiracy theory anymore. These articles are made to artificially hype up shit regular people never heard of all the time, and then there will always be those that got on the trend first that will benefit the most. It’s like insider trading, but on tangible object instead.
>barges into the thread like a mentally ill kool aid man
Did someone say "conspiracy!?"

So let me toss in my two cents: this is residual madness left over from 90s consoooomerism. There were divorce court battles over benie babies, where they had to be separated in the court, tickle me elmo was something all the kids allegedly wanted. I have thankfully forgotten the rest. It started back up again with all the minecraft adjacent grift like aphmau.

It's not mad scientists i am afraid of, we need MORE of those guys, they try to innovate. It's Mad businessmen and worse Mad politicians. Those are the guys to watch out for. This commercial slop is the result of mad business.
 
LMAO my family found a massive sacks of Beanie Babies in the attic a few weeks ago and we learned that Mom would take extended lunch breaks in the mid to late 1990s to run to the one store in town that got them first.

I'll say we have a first run Snort the Bull along with a few rare ones..... So once we get those up on eBay I'll be retiring early 😆

My Mom can also NEVER make fun of my autistic hobbies/collections now either lol
Are Beanie Babies STILL worth money? I thought that whole market collapsed like a Temu deck chair when a sumo wrestler sits in it.
 
Are Beanie Babies STILL worth money? I thought that whole market collapsed like a Temu deck chair when a sumo wrestler sits in it.
There is still niche demand for rare and misproduced beanie babies because there are still people who see them as an investment for retirement/Johnny’s college fund.
 
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