Angel Bubu vs Kidrobot Dunny — Honest 2026 Comparison for Collectors

In 2026, the designer toy aisle is more crowded than ever, and two very different art-toy paths sit side by side: Angel Bubu, an 18cm halo-and-wings collectible from voxelyo.com, and Kidrobot's long-running Dunny vinyl platform that retails between $12 and $200 depending on rarity. This comparison is not a winner-takes-all verdict — it is an honest read of where each figure fits. Angel Bubu is an independent 3D-printed Labubu-style piece; Dunny is a 20-year-old vinyl institution. Different goals, different buyers.

At a Glance

Angel Bubu is a single 18cm pastel-and-halo figure at a flat $39.90, hand-finished in PLA and shipped direct from voxelyo.com. Kidrobot Dunny is an entire platform: a 7.5–20cm vinyl rabbit-like silhouette released in waves, blind-box series, and artist collaborations spanning 2004 to 2026.

If you want one specific ethereal piece on your shelf, Angel Bubu is a closed decision. If you want a hunt — chase figures, blind-boxes, 100+ artist variants — Dunny is the deeper rabbit hole.

Price & Availability

Angel Bubu is priced at $39.90 USD, single SKU, available year-round on voxelyo.com with worldwide shipping (rates calculated at checkout — see voxelyo.com/refund-policy for return terms). There is no blind-box, no chase variant, no markup ladder. What you see is what ships.

Kidrobot Dunny pricing is a wide band in 2026: standard 3-inch blind-box figures sit around $12–15, 8-inch artist editions land in the $40–80 range, and chase or vintage figures from sought-after series (Frank Kozik, KAWS-era collaborations) routinely hit $200 and above on the secondary market. Available through kidrobot.com, specialty toy retailers, and aftermarket platforms — supply on older series is hit-or-miss.

Size & Material

Angel Bubu is fixed at 18cm — what voxelyo calls Mega-scale — printed in premium PLA bioplastic and hand-finished. PLA gives a matte, slightly textured surface that takes paint cleanly; it is not the glossy injection-molded vinyl feel some collectors expect, and that is a deliberate aesthetic choice rather than a cost shortcut.

Kidrobot Dunny ranges from 7.5cm (3-inch keychain/mini) up to 20cm (8-inch artist edition), with a smooth rotocast vinyl finish that has defined the platform since 2004. Vinyl resists drops better than PLA; PLA holds finer sculpted detail than vinyl. Material preference here is genuinely a taste call, not a quality call.

Design Language

Angel Bubu leans ethereal and gift-friendly: pastel palette, soft halo, sculpted wings — the aesthetic vocabulary draws from the broader Labubu-style plush-monster trend that exploded in 2024–2025, reinterpreted as a hand-finished 3D-printed figure. It is a single coherent statement piece designed to read well on a shelf or as a gift.

Kidrobot Dunny is a blank-canvas platform — the rabbit silhouette is the constant, and 100+ artists across 20 years have remixed it into everything from street-art tributes to horror, sci-fi, and pop-culture mashups. Dunny's design language is variety; Angel Bubu's design language is a single mood done well.

Who Should Buy What

Buy Angel Bubu if you want one ethereal pastel piece, you like supporting independent 3D-printed work, you are gifting (the halo-and-wings vibe reads gift-ready), or you specifically want the Labubu-style aesthetic without the Pop Mart secondary-market markup. voxelyo is NOT affiliated with Pop Mart — it is an independent studio shipping its own designs, not a substitute for authentic Pop Mart product.

Buy a Kidrobot Dunny if you want platform depth, the thrill of blind-box hunting, artist-collaboration collecting, or a 20-year backlog to dig through. If your shelf already has 5+ Dunnys, adding another Dunny compounds your collection in a way Angel Bubu cannot. Honestly: for hardcore platform collectors, Dunny wins on ecosystem alone.

Verdict

These are not direct substitutes. Angel Bubu at $39.90 is a finished aesthetic decision — one figure, one mood, hand-finished PLA, shipped direct. Kidrobot Dunny at $12–200 is an open-ended collecting hobby with two decades of catalog. voxelyo's positioning is honest: independent 3D-printed Labubu-style work, not a Pop Mart replica and not a Dunny competitor. If the halo-and-wings aesthetic is what you came for, Angel Bubu is the right buy. If you want to keep collecting for the next ten years, Dunny is the platform.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is Angel Bubu an authentic Pop Mart Labubu?

No. Angel Bubu is an independent 3D-printed Labubu-style figure designed and shipped by voxelyo.com. voxelyo is not affiliated with Pop Mart and does not sell Pop Mart product. If you want authentic Pop Mart Labubu, buy from Pop Mart directly.

Will Angel Bubu hold up as well as a vinyl Dunny over time?

PLA and vinyl age differently. Vinyl Dunnys tolerate drops and handling better, which is why they have lasted on shelves since 2004. PLA holds finer sculpt detail and matte finish but is more brittle on impact. For a display piece kept on a shelf, both materials are fine for years; for a figure that gets handled often, vinyl has the durability edge.

Can I find Angel Bubu in blind-boxes or chase variants like Dunny?

No. Angel Bubu is sold as a single SKU at a flat $39.90 on voxelyo.com — no blind-box mechanic, no chase rarity, no aftermarket markup ladder. That is a deliberate design choice; if blind-box hunting is the part of collecting you enjoy, Kidrobot Dunny's platform model is built for exactly that and Angel Bubu is not the right buy.

View angel bubu on voxelyo.com →

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