Prize figures are officially licensed anime and pop-culture character statues originally designed to be won from Japanese arcade crane games, UFO catchers, or lottery promotions. Today, they have become one of the most popular and affordable types of anime collectibles worldwide.
Anime prize figures are especially famous for offering great sculpt quality, vibrant paintwork, and popular characters at budget-friendly prices. Unlike premium scale figures, prize figures are mass-produced and machine-painted, making them significantly more accessible while still maintaining strong visual appeal. Most prize figures typically range from $15–$35, making them the perfect entry point for beginner collectors or anime fans looking to expand their display shelves without spending hundreds of dollars.
Prize figure types
Collectors can explore several major types of prize figures, depending on display preference, franchise, and budget:
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Standard Claw Machine Figures: The most common type of prize figure. These are single-piece PVC statues around 14–20 cm tall. Mass-produced but still featuring decent sculpting for the price. Price range: $20–$40. Popular lines include Banpresto Vibration Stars and Grandista.
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Premium Lines: High-detail prize figures that rival entry-level scale figures. Often feature translucent parts, elaborate bases, or intricate paintwork. Examples include Taito Coreful, Sega Luminasta, and FuRyu BiCute Bunnies.
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Noodle Stoppers: Functional and highly collectible mini figures designed to sit on the lid of instant ramen cups while cooking. Flat-bottom or dangling-leg designs make them playful display items.
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Ichiban Kuji (Lottery) Figures: Figures won via raffle or lottery systems in Japan, offering higher-tier quality (Masterlise) and larger, more detailed designs than standard claw machine figures.
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Trading or Mini Figures: Tiny, un-scaled figures usually sold in blind boxes or blind bags. Their random contents make them highly tradeable and collectible, ideal for completing sets or casual collecting.
Popular prize figure brands & collectible lines
Several Japanese manufacturers dominate the prize figure market, each offering distinctive styles and collectible lines:
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SEGA: Famous for premium affordable lines like Luminasta and Premium Chokonose, featuring highly detailed anime characters and dynamic poses.
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Banpresto: One of the most recognizable brands, known for popular lines like Q Posket, Glitter & Glamours, King of Artist, and Vibration Stars.
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Taito: Creator of fan-favorite lines like Coreful and Noodle Stopper Figures, especially popular among Hatsune Miku collectors.
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FuRyu: Known for stylish and oversized releases such as BiCute Bunnies and Trio-Try-iT collections.
These brands produce figures from hit franchises including Demon Slayer, One Piece, Dragon Ball, Hatsune Miku, Jujutsu Kaisen, Re:Zero, Chainsaw Man, and Hololive.
Prize Figure quality & packaging
Prize figures are designed to balance affordability with attractive display quality. Most are made from PVC and ABS materials with simplified but colorful paint applications and anime-accurate sculpting. Compared to premium scale figures, prize figures may feature simpler bases, fewer intricate details, or minimal packaging windows, but they remain highly collectible for their price range.
Packaging is usually straightforward, using standard cardboard boxes with protective plastic or cardboard inserts, helping keep prices affordable while protecting the figure during shipping.
Japan Figure offers a curated selection of authentic anime prize figures, including SEGA, Banpresto, Taito, and FuRyu releases from the most popular anime franchises. With worldwide shipping, collectors can shop affordable, officially licensed Japanese prize figures, including limited arcade exclusives, Hatsune Miku collectibles, and fan-favorite anime characters directly from Japan