Is this craze just harmless fun? With adults spending hundreds of pounds on collecting soft toys, criminal gangs have started to target the shops that sell them.
Thieves nab Jellycats amid toy fever
Is this craze just harmless fun? With adults spending hundreds of pounds on collecting soft toys, criminal gangs have started to target the shops that sell them.
Picture the scene. Three men enter a toyshop with their faces hidden behind masks. Instead of emptying the cash registers, they start sweeping stuffed toys off the shelves, filling their sacks with soft bunnies and other "plushies".
According to reports, organised crime gangs have started targeting soft toys to sell online. In particular, they are stealing Jellycats, after the brand went viral on social media. On TikTok, videos tagged #Plushies have been viewed around eight billion times,1 while celebrity fans include Kylie Jenner and Bill Nighy.
Soft toys are the second largest category in the toy market. Over a quarter of sales come from "kidults" - those aged 12 and above. The trend began during the pandemic, according to one soft-toy shop owner, as grown-ups went looking for objects that brought "happiness and comfort". 2
For some, Jellycats are a bit of fun. For others, they are vital support. One example is Sallyanne Redman, who began going on adventures with a Bashful Puppy toy called Shep, after the death of her husband. "I live on my own now and it is something I can talk to," she explained.3
Critics argue that Jellycats are another sign of an infantilisedTreated someone as a child. generation. MillennialsPeople who reached adulthood in the early 21st Century. and Gen ZShort for Generation Z, meaning people born in the late 1990s and early 2000s. have delayed many of the traditional markers of adult life, like leaving home, becoming financially independent, and starting a family.
In Britain, the medianThe median is the middle point in a group of numbers: half of the numbers are smaller than the median and half are larger. age for a first marriage is 33 for men and 31 for women - a decade higher than in the early 1960s. One study from 2016 showed that Americans aged 18 to 34 were more likely to be living with their parents than their partners - for the first time in 130 years.4
Even if a trend is embarrassing, that does not make it wrong. Stealing from toy shops is obviously a crime, but we should not condemn adults for owning stuffed toys.
Is this craze just harmless fun?
Yes: People should be free to collect whatever they want. Adults spending hundreds on stuffed toys might be strange, but they should not be blamed for criminal gangs targeting toy shops.
No: Collecting soft toys is more evidence that Millennials and Gen Z refuse to grow up. Adult life may be hard, but queuing up to buy a stuffed toilet roll toy is not the solution.
Or... Jellycats are not the first soft toys to have grown-up fans. The trend may be embarrassing, but some people find real comfort and support in their plushie collections.
Infantilised - Treated someone as a child.
Millennials - People who reached adulthood in the early 21st Century.
Gen Z - Short for Generation Z, meaning people born in the late 1990s and early 2000s.
Median - The median is the middle point in a group of numbers: half of the numbers are smaller than the median and half are larger.
Thieves nab Jellycats amid toy fever

Glossary
Infantilised - Treated someone as a child.
Millennials - People who reached adulthood in the early 21st Century.
Gen Z - Short for Generation Z, meaning people born in the late 1990s and early 2000s.
Median - The median is the middle point in a group of numbers: half of the numbers are smaller than the median and half are larger.