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5 Anime Characters Whose Figures Will Make Your Wallet Scream in 2026
The anime figure market is heating up fast, and 2026 looks set to deliver some serious heat. This article dives into five characters poised to dominate shelves, from rising shonen stars to unexpected dark-horse beauties. We break down why their sculpts will sell out, what makes their designs figure-friendly, and how collectors can get ahead of the hype. Expect insider takes on upcoming anime seasons, sculptor rumors, and the kind of cheeky collector stories that turn casual fans into full-blown addicts. Whether you’re hunting 1/7 scales or prize figures, these picks blend popularity spikes with pure visual punch. Get ready to refresh those pre-order pages.
The Next Wave Is Already Knocking
Anime figures have always thrived on timing. A single cour of great animation or a viral manga panel can send pre-order numbers into orbit. Right now the tea leaves point to 2026 as a year where several characters will leap from “pretty cool” to “I need three versions.” The usual suspects—Jujutsu Kaisen and Demon Slayer—still have momentum, but fresh blood is coming. Here are the five names you’ll see everywhere from Tokyo’s Akihabara alleys to Western unboxing channels.
Maomao – The Apothecary’s Poisonous Charm
Season 2 of The Apothecary Diaries is confirmed for early 2026, and Maomao’s mix of deadpan sass and forensic brilliance is pure figure gold. Her green robes and intricate hairpins already lend themselves to layered sculpting. Expect manufacturers to lean into her “poison taster” motif with translucent liquid effects and interchangeable expressions. One major sculptor hinted at a 1/6 scale that includes a tiny silver hairpin you can actually remove—tiny details like that turn casual buyers into completionists. Collectors who slept on her first wave are already regretting it; secondary market prices for the initial 1/7 have doubled. If you want the next version, watch for announcements right after the season premiere trailer drops.
Kafka Hibino – Kaiju No. 8’s Reluctant Monster
Kafka’s dual identity as salaryman-turned-kaiju gives sculptors two wildly different aesthetics in one character. The human form is all sharp suits and tired eyes; the transformed version brings jagged scales and glowing eyes. Good Smile Company and Aniplex have both shown interest in 1/8 scales that swap parts, letting you display either side on the same base. The timing is perfect: the manga is peaking and the anime’s second cour should land mid-2026. The real flex will be limited editions with translucent kaiju flesh revealing the human silhouette inside—nerds will fight over those on Twitter within hours of reveal.
Momo Ayase – Dandadan’s Ghost-Hunting Firecracker
Dandadan exploded in 2024, and Momo’s mix of delinquent attitude and spiritual powers is tailor-made for dynamic posing. Picture her mid-air with golden aura effects and a baseball bat that lights up via LED base. Because the series blends horror and comedy, expect figures that lean playful rather than grim—maybe even a chibi-style “angry Momo” variant. Prize figure makers are already circling; those tend to be the gateway drug that hooks new collectors. If you’re on a budget, grab the Banpresto version early. The scale figures will cost more than your last three figures combined.
Fami – Chainsaw Man’s Enigmatic Horseman
Chainsaw Man Part 2 keeps feeding us cryptic Horsemen, and Fami’s calm, food-obsessed demeanor hides terrifying power. Her design—simple school uniform contrasted with massive, almost sculptural hair—offers clean lines that still allow for dramatic flourishes. Rumors suggest a 1/7 from a new studio that specializes in subtle gradients on clothing. The figure scene loves characters with hidden menace; think how popular Makima still is years later. Fami’s quiet intensity should translate into that same long-tail demand. Pre-order windows will be short once the next major arc hits the anime adaptation.
Alucard – Castlevania: Nocturne’s Brooding Vampire
Western properties are finally getting serious figure love. Alucard’s return in the Netflix series brings flowing hair, intricate coat details, and that signature sword. European collectors have been starved for high-end options; Japanese manufacturers are answering with a 1/6 that includes swappable expressions and a blood-effect cape. The gothic aesthetic photographs beautifully under ring lights, which matters for the growing TikTok collector crowd. Expect at least one version with LED eyes—because nothing says “I spent too much” like glowing red orbs on your shelf at 2 a.m.
How to Play the Market Without Losing Your Mind
Start watching official Twitter accounts and Chinese proxy sites the moment a silhouette teaser appears. Many 2026 figures will use a “second payment” system, so keep liquid funds ready. If you’re new, begin with prize figures of these characters to test the waters before dropping serious cash on scales. And remember: the best figures are the ones you actually enjoy looking at, not the ones that merely hold value.





