Today’s selection brings together pocket-sized treasures from across Japan’s pop-culture landscape. From classic Pokémon merchandise to a tokusatsu spin figure and a Disney crossover charm, each piece reflects a different corner of the country’s collectible scene.
Spinarak Pokémon Metal Charm
A small metal charm featuring Spinarak, the spider-like Pokémon first introduced in the Generation II Gold and Silver games. Metal charms like this were often produced in Japan as gashapon prizes or promotional items tied to the franchise’s long merchandising history.
Price: £10.83 GBP | View on eBay
Mawari Soul Knight Mode Ryusouger Spin Figure
A spin figure from Kishiryu Sentai Ryusouger, the 2019 entry in Toei’s long-running Super Sentai television series. Super Sentai is the Japanese tokusatsu franchise that has been adapted internationally into the Power Rangers series since the 1990s.
Price: $24.83 AUD | View on eBay
Nuzleaf Pokémon Mega Bloks Figure
A buildable figure of Nuzleaf, a Grass and Dark-type Pokémon introduced in the Generation III Ruby and Sapphire games. Mega Bloks released several Pokémon construction sets featuring poseable character figures alongside brick-built scenes.
Price: £10.85 GBP | View on eBay
Kalim Al-Asim Twisted Wonderland 3-Charm Keychain
A three-charm keychain featuring Kalim Al-Asim from Disney Twisted Wonderland, the mobile game developed by Aniplex and published in Japan in 2020. The game reimagines characters inspired by Disney villains as students at a magical academy and has built a substantial merchandise line.
Price: $20.49 AUD | View on eBay
About This Collection
These four items span more than two decades of Japanese character merchandising, from late-1990s Pokémon charms to a recent mobile-game keychain. Together they show how small collectibles continue to be a defining format for Japanese pop-culture fandom.