
Everything Boba Fett From Toy Fair New York 2025
This weekend, Boba Fett Fan Club went to Toy Fair New York, a trade show that brings toy companies and distributors under one roof to show off their latest products. Boba Fett had a big presence at the show – at least in terms of the Gentle Giant Studios booth – but there were lots of other Star Wars goodies, too, so let’s jump in.
Gentle Giant Studios
As I walked the floor Saturday morning, I was shocked to see a giant Kenner-action-figure-style Boba Fett statue at the Gentle Giant Studios booth. This was a fiberglass version of the 3D-printed Boba Fett Life Size Vintage Monument that Gentle Giant released all the way back in 2015 for $2,750. According to the representative at the show, they’re not planning a re-release of the six-foot scale behemoth, but thought it would be cool to bring along. It certainly got my attention, so mission accomplished.
Gentle Giant Ltd. and Diamond Select Toys
Not to be confused with the aforementioned Gentle Giant Studios, which does 3D scanning, prototyping and fabrication, the Gentle Giant Ltd. and Diamond Select Toys booth had a few new Star Wars items on display for the first time, including Jumbo Figures of Darth Vader (First Appearance), IG-12 with Anzellans and IG-12 with Grogu from “The Mandalorian” season three. It was surprising that there were no Boba Fett collectibles in the booth at all, but if you’ve got a craving for Fett, may we suggest their AOTC mini bust or the unhelmeted “The Book Of Boba Fett” (TBOBF) mini bust?
Hasbro
Hasbro invited BFFC to an after-hours fan media event to get an inside look at some of their latest action figures. There were two Boba Fetts on display: The Walmart-exclusive MixMashers “TBOBF” Boba Fett with pieces you can pull apart and recombine to create a Franken-Fett and the Epic World of Action Power the Force figure based on his appearance in “The Mandalorian.” The latter seems to be a rebranded repack of the 2024 Epic Hero four-inch scale figure that includes a giant jetpack with firing rocket and a flamethrower gauntlet. Both of the figures are aimed at a younger demographic (ages four and up), feature fewer points of articulation than Hasbro’s Vintage Collection (TVC) and Black Series figures and come at a cheaper price point.
I’m still hoping we’ll get a more accurate Black Series “TBOBF” figure as the TBOBF-branded version that was released in 2022 seems to be based on Fett’s appearance in “The Mandalorian” season two. Check out our guides on the differences between the “Re-armored” Mando Chapter 15 and “Daimyo” TBOBF costumes to see the differences.
Also on display were a number of figures previously revealed in the Hasbro Star Wars team’s February 2025 livestream, including those from the Revenge of the Sith 25th Anniversary and Return to Tatooine themes, as well as the new Acolyte Stranger Black Series role play helmet.
Funko and Loungefly
Funko’s booth heavily featured their new Bitty Pop Bitty City line, which have road, scenery and land accessory packs to display your Bitty Pop and Bitty Town collections. The Bitty Pops are only 0.9-inches tall and come in similarly tiny boxes, so these are essentially even smaller versions of a Lego minifigure-scale city. There was a Bitty Pop Luke in his landspeeder driving (or would it be hovering?) down the street tailed by Santa in the Millenium Falcon in Funko’s display city, so we may see Boba in Slave I eventually. You can get the new “The Empire Strikes Back” Fett Bitty Pop figure in a four-pack (available on Amazon and seen in the Death Star display above) and “The Mandalorian” Fett Bitty Pop in another four-pack (also available on Amazon).
The only other Boba Fett I saw in the booth was from 2024’s Pocket Pop Holiday Mini-Figure 4-Pack, which are one-to-two inches tall and not to be confused with the Bitty Pops. As an aside, did you know there are a ton of Pop sizes?
Over the last few months, I’ve noticed a conspicuous lack of Star Wars Loungefly items being released, and when I asked a Funko/Loungefly rep at Toy Fair about it, she said there will be more coming later this year for May the Fourth.
Jazwares Micro Galaxy Squadron
I’ve been loving Jazwares’ Micro Galaxy Squadron line, which has given us three renditions of Slave I so far: Jango Fett’s Starship, Boba Fett’s Starship from TBOBF and Boba Fett’s Starship from ESB, which began arriving from Amazon just last week. You can check out our 2023 video review of the first two. Boba has also been released in the Clash at Carkoon Battle Pack and as a Nikto Speeder Chase variant.
Jazwares had no Boba Fett reveals at Toy Fair, but they did show off new ARC-170 and TIE/rp Reaper attack lander ships.
Paladone
Paladone makes licensed fandom products and had a number of Star Wars options on display in their booth. I reviewed their Boba Fett Diorama Light back in 2022 – it holds an honorary place on my desk – but there are a lot more lighting options where that came from. Their 48-inch tall and 10-inch wide half-scale Death Star panel lights (available at Entertainment Earth) can change color and react to music, although at $149.99 for one panel, decking out a whole room with them would require a significant investment. Paladone’s Millennium Falcon and X-Wing desk lights were also on display, and I think a Slave I version would be neat to see in the future.
Their 4.7” Din Djarin and Grogu holographic laser-etched crystal lights (available on Amazon) at the show would make great night lights; the Paladone rep I spoke to said there was a Boba Fett version that wasn’t on display, but that hasn’t been officially announced, so stay tuned on that.
While I’m iterating on products, a holographic crystal light of a Jango Fett clone in an embryo tube like we saw in “Attack of the Clones” and “The Bad Batch” would be the perfect application for the format, although I highly doubt that will happen because the market for that would essentially just be me.
Metal Earth
There were a few Boba Fett model kits in Metal Earth’s Toy Fair booth this year. I hadn’t seen their TBOBF Slave I kit (although it came out back in 2022), but I had seen the helmet model kit that was on display that came out a few years before that. Be aware that these kits are rated eight out of ten and five out of ten in difficulty, respectfully, so I would recommend trying some easier Metal Earth kits before tackling these.
Just Play
Disney’s Star Wars Doorables get in on the chibi blind box craze, and a display at Just Play’s Toy Fair booth featured the tiny figures and vehicles of the Galactic Cruisers Series 2. Thankfully, the Boba Fett with matching deco X-wing variant is considered common among this series, and boxes sporting the barcode ending in “A10” contain the bounty hunter, according to a tip from @darthjaq on Twitter.
Shadow Pop Displays
It’s sometimes difficult for collectors to display all of our figures – there’s only so much shelf space, after all, so the Shadow Pop Displays booth definitely caught my eye. These shadow boxes are made from corrugated cardboard and can be customized with backgrounds like Lego plates or comic covers, as well as acrylic shelves. They’re also relatively inexpensive with a four-pack coming in at $36. The light speed variant would look great with your Star Wars figures.
That’s all for Toy Fair 2025! Let us know if there’s anything that caught your eye from our round-up and follow Boba Fett Fan Club on social to stay up to date on all of the latest Fett collectibles.
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