Today’s Random Four
Every morning we pull a handful of items from our store completely at random — and today, these four surfaced. Use code D260617C81 at checkout for an extra 15% off any of them, stacked on top of the sale prices already running. With today’s markdowns, that’s up to 30% off. Good for 3 days. New picks drop every morning, so check back — you never know what’ll turn up.
Today’s selection moves across decades and genres of Japanese collecting. From a vintage arcade-era eraser figure to a wooden folk doll, each piece reflects a different corner of Japan’s craft and pop-culture traditions.
Balrog Street Fighter Vintage Retro Eraser Rubber Doll Mini Figure
A small rubber eraser figure of Balrog, the boxer character from Capcom’s Street Fighter series. Eraser figures, known as keshigomu, were a common school-yard collectible in Japan during the arcade boom of the late 1980s and 1990s.
Price: $12.23 | View on eBay
Mie soul Power Rangers Dino Fury Ryusoulger DX Ryusoul Key Morpher
A DX Ryusoul Key Morpher item tied to Ryusoulger, the Japanese tokusatsu series that was adapted overseas as Power Rangers Dino Fury. Tokusatsu, meaning “special filming,” is the live-action superhero genre that has produced long-running franchises like Super Sentai and Kamen Rider.
Price: $16.64 | View on eBay
Kokeshi Doll Japanese Creative Wood Figurine with Eboshi Hat
A wooden kokeshi figurine wearing an eboshi, the tall lacquered cap historically worn by court nobles and samurai. Kokeshi dolls originated in the hot-spring regions of northeastern Japan and have been hand-turned on lathes since the Edo period.
Price: $17.54 | View on eBay
Piplup Pokemon Katazun Fig Takara Tomy Arts Figure Japan Kawaii Rare Collectible
A Katazun-series figure of Piplup, the Sinnoh-region water-type Pokemon, produced by Takara Tomy Arts. Takara Tomy Arts is the capsule-toy and character-goods arm of Takara Tomy, one of Japan’s largest toy makers.
Price: $15.74 | View on eBay
About This Collection
Today’s four items show how broadly Japanese collecting reaches: a 1990s arcade-era eraser, a tokusatsu morpher, a folk-craft kokeshi, and a modern capsule-toy Pokemon. Together they trace a line from traditional wooden crafts to the character goods that fill Japanese toy shelves today.