The fall of Labubus and the mush of modern internet trends

From $200 craze to $30 TikTok trinket: fandom vs flip bros

TLDR: Labubus went from $200 hype to $30 TikTok fodder as Pop Mart’s stock slid 35%. Comments split between 'Beanie Baby bust' doomers and collectors claiming sales still roar, with a side fight over whether today’s internet makes trends scatter faster or just feel louder.

Those wide-eyed, slightly demonic Labubus that haunted every airport and bathroom stall went from collector gold to TikTok Shop impulse buys in record time. The article says prices crashed from $200 to $30 and Pop Mart’s stock fell nearly 35%. The comments? Pure chaos. One camp is gleefully dancing on the plushie grave. rvz roasted Labubus as Beanie Babies 2.0, and tracerbulletx shrugged, “same old pogs, different decade.” The knockoff nickname “Lafufus” became a meme—commenters joked the fake ones stare less and judge more.

But the plot twist: not everyone agrees the trend is over. tofuahdude insists the critters only just reached their circle, while miladyincontrol claims the “fall” is just flippers crying as restocks still sell out. Cue the culture war. The author blames fragmented, short-form internet mush for turbo-churn, but ginko snaps back that this “decentralized” take is backwards. The whole thread turns into a showdown: collectors vs speculators, hype vs fatigue, and a philosophical slap-fight over whether modern trends die faster or just move sideways into niche cults. One user summed up the vibe with the ultimate word salad: “Labubu Dubai chocolate Love Island matcha”—aka the internet’s chaotic soup of everything, everywhere, all at once.

Key Points

  • Labubus originated from a 2015 picture book series by Kasing Lung and later became toys.
  • The toys gained traction in 2024 and early 2025, then surged in popularity over summer 2025 with strong global demand and a resale boom.
  • At the peak, prices reached around $200 for a Labubu; now genuine Labubus are promoted for about $30 on TikTok Shop, indicating higher availability.
  • Pop Mart, the company behind Labubus, has seen its stock price fall nearly 35% from its August 2025 peak.
  • The article argues modern internet trends rise and fade rapidly due to social media connectivity, short-form content, and decentralized, algorithm-driven niche communities.

Hottest takes

"cringeworthy fad, equivalent to the modern day beanie babies" — rvz
"feels exactly backwards" — ginko
"the big 'fall' was for flippers... restocks still selling out" — miladyincontrol
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