Angel Bubu vs Smiski — Honest 2026 Comparison for Collectors

Choosing between Angel Bubu and Smiski in 2026 is less about ranking two competitors and more about picking two completely different collecting experiences. Angel Bubu is an independent 3D-printed Labubu-style collectible from voxelyo.com — an 18cm pastel-winged statement piece. Smiski is the long-running Japanese glow-in-dark vinyl line from Dreams Inc, designed to live tucked into a bookshelf corner. This comparison breaks down price, size, material, design language, and buyer fit so you can decide which one belongs on your shelf — or whether you actually want both.

At a Glance

Angel Bubu is a single, intentional 18cm display figure at $39.90 with halo and pastel wings, hand-finished in PLA by voxelyo. Smiski is a $8-15 blind-box style 5-7cm vinyl figure that glows in the dark, sold across roughly 30+ poses and series since the line launched in 2017.

Bottom line: Angel Bubu is a centerpiece you display front and center; Smiski is a small, repeatable collectible designed to disappear into shelves and reappear at night. Different jobs, different price tiers, almost no overlap in use case.

Price & Availability

Angel Bubu is listed at $39.90 USD on voxelyo.com, sold direct-to-consumer with worldwide shipping (rates calculated at checkout — see voxelyo.com for current options). Each unit is made-to-order in PLA, so availability is governed by production queue rather than retail stock.

Smiski figures generally retail between $8 and $15 USD per blind box at specialty retailers, anime shops, and Amazon, with full 6-figure series sets typically running $48-90. Smiski is the cheaper per-unit entry point in 2026, but completing a series usually costs more in total than a single Angel Bubu. If you collect by impulse, Smiski wins on accessibility; if you buy one figure intentionally, Angel Bubu's pricing is more predictable.

Size & Material

Angel Bubu is an 18cm Mega-scale piece — roughly 3x the height of a standard Smiski. That scale puts it in display-shelf or desk-centerpiece territory, and the premium PLA construction with hand-finishing gives it a matte, sculptural feel rather than a glossy toy finish.

Smiski measures 5-7cm and is cast in phosphorescent vinyl, which is the entire point of the line — they charge under light and glow softly for 20-30 minutes after lights-out. Vinyl is more drop-tolerant than PLA, which matters if a figure will be handled by kids or moved often. PLA is rigid and finer-detailed, but it does not glow and is more sensitive to direct sunlight or heat above ~50°C.

Design Language

Angel Bubu leans ethereal and gift-friendly: halo, pastel wings, soft-color palette, and the wide-eyed Labubu-style silhouette that has driven the broader designer-toy wave since 2024. It reads as a romantic or celebratory piece — birthday, anniversary, or self-treat energy.

Smiski's design language is the opposite: muted green vinyl, deliberately understated poses (peeking, hiding, hugging knees), and a quiet humor that rewards placing them in unexpected corners of a room. Where Angel Bubu asks to be seen, Smiski asks to be discovered. Neither aesthetic is better — they're solving different emotional briefs.

Who Should Buy What

Buy Smiski if: you want a low-commitment $10 impulse collectible, you love glow-in-dark gimmicks, you enjoy the blind-box surprise mechanic, or you're decorating shelves with small repeatable accents. Smiski is also the better pick for gifts under $15 and for collectors who already own dozens of small figures.

Buy Angel Bubu if: you want one statement piece on a desk or display shelf, you're drawn to the pastel-Labubu aesthetic, you prefer buying a known SKU directly rather than gambling on blind boxes, and you value 3D-printed hand-finished work over mass-produced vinyl. Angel Bubu is also the stronger pick for a single meaningful gift in the $30-50 range.

Verdict

These two products barely compete — they live in different price tiers, sizes, and emotional categories. Smiski wins on price-per-unit, drop-resistance, and the glow gimmick. Angel Bubu wins on visual presence, design intentionality, and the 'one figure, no surprises' purchase model. Voxelyo is an independent 3D-printed studio shipping its own designs in PLA — not affiliated with Pop Mart, Dreams Inc, or any blind-box line. If you want a small green figure that glows under your nightstand, buy Smiski. If you want an 18cm pastel-winged centerpiece that arrives hand-finished from voxelyo.com, Angel Bubu is the right call. Many collectors in 2026 quietly own both.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is Angel Bubu a Pop Mart product or a Smiski alternative?

Neither. Angel Bubu is an independent 3D-printed collectible from voxelyo.com, not affiliated with Pop Mart or Dreams Inc (the maker of Smiski). It's its own design in the broader Labubu-style aesthetic category, sold direct from the studio in 18cm PLA at $39.90.

Does Angel Bubu glow in the dark like Smiski?

No. Smiski's defining feature is phosphorescent vinyl that glows for 20-30 minutes after light exposure. Angel Bubu is matte hand-finished PLA with no glow function — it's designed as a display piece for lit environments, not a nightstand glow object.

Which is better for gifting in 2026?

It depends on budget and recipient. Under $15 with surprise factor: Smiski blind box. Around $40 with a single intentional piece and ethereal pastel aesthetic: Angel Bubu. For kids under 8 who will handle the figure roughly, Smiski's vinyl is more durable than Angel Bubu's rigid PLA.

View angel bubu on voxelyo.com →

← Browse all 7 voxelyo editions