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Why capsule toys are so loved in Japan and how producers are looking to spread that love

  • Capsule toys are booming in Japan – and companies that make the toys, and the machines dispensing them, are looking to expand overseas

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A bank of capsule toy machines at a store in Japan. The companies who make the machines are now setting their sights on expansion in other parts of Asia, where the machines are already popular. Photo: Getty Images

Japan’s capsule toy industry has come a long way from the corner of the supermarket, as it enjoys a new boom at home that is spurring multiple market players to set their sights on overseas expansion.

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The Japan Toy Association estimates the capsule toy market was worth 61 billion yen (US$378 million) in the 2022 financial year, up 35.6 per cent in one year, and expects it to grow further.

“We probably still have about two years of headroom in the Japanese market, but there’s just a physical limit to how many stores can open in shopping centres and bring in new business,” said Daisuke Morikuni, director of the capsule toy department at Yell, a toy and prize maker focusing on producing original character designs.

Insiders say 600 to 700 product series are set to be released each month this summer by around 60 toymakers.

A “gasha-pon”, or capsule toy, dispensed by a vending machine in the Dream Mall in Kaohsiung, Taiwan. Photo: Getty Images
A “gasha-pon”, or capsule toy, dispensed by a vending machine in the Dream Mall in Kaohsiung, Taiwan. Photo: Getty Images

Yell is expanding into Asian markets such as Taiwan and South Korea with its offbeat, cute toys, including its headline range of praying animal toys. Overseas customers account for about 10 per cent of its capsule toy sales.

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