Gogo's Crazy Bones - Similar Products

Similar Products

During the mid 1990s, Coca Cola released a similar brand of toys named "Hielocos" in Mexico, Ecuador and "Geloucos" in Brazil (translated to 'Crazy Ices').

Since the resurgence of the European Gogo's Crazy Bones, several similar products have entered the market;

  • Little Tokyo's / Japs - Made by Exit toys of Barcelona
  • Toonz/Blinku/XRays micro monsters (40 to collect + 2(?)half-toonz that connect to create a single micro monster) - Clearly derivative but with the gimmick of animated '3d motion effect' faces. Made by Dracco, a Danish company with a Macau-based subsidiary.
  • Skyzos - Made by Panini. Each model has a good and evil side.
  • Fings - Made by Topps Europe
  • Frikis - Made by E-Max (Have a BONES™ label on the back.)
  • Jojo's, Bouncin Boneheads and TimFoot - Made by Imperial Toys
  • Fidgets' Knuckleheads - Made by Moose
  • Dracco Heads - Made by Dracco
  • Simpsons - Made by Dracco
  • Grolls & Gorks - Made by Dracco
  • Dragon Hunter - Made by Dracco
  • Crazy Critters - Made by Avon Company (Use same sculpts as Knuckle Heads)
  • Nitsus - Made by Abril
  • Jetsons - Sold in Peru
  • Avengers Chibis - Made by Bulls-Eye Toys
  • Digimon - Only released in Peru
  • Matuolas - Made by Matutano (Characters were stolen from Crazy Bones)
  • E - Flyers - Made by E Max (Added a gimmick of magnets)
  • Spongebob - Made by E Max (e-flyers)
  • Dunkin Shockys - Made by ???
  • Star Wars - Made by Dracco

Read more about this topic:  Gogo's Crazy Bones

Famous quotes containing the words similar and/or products:

    The history of all Magazines shows plainly that those which have attained celebrity were indebted for it to articles similar in natureto Berenice—although, I grant you, far superior in style and execution. I say similar in nature. You ask me in what does this nature consist? In the ludicrous heightened into the grotesque: the fearful coloured into the horrible: the witty exaggerated into the burlesque: the singular wrought out into the strange and mystical.
    Edgar Allan Poe (1809–1849)

    Good wine needs no bush,
    And perhaps products that people really want need no
    hard-sell or soft-sell TV push.
    Why not?
    Look at pot.
    Ogden Nash (1902–1971)