Despite shortages due to a disrupted supply chain as a result of the current 2019 Novel Coronavirus pandemic and seemingly ineffectual leaders around the world who think that repeated lockdowns of their constituents are the penultimate answer to eliminating the virus, children still need to play — and toys have long been the vehicle with which boys and girls can have fun by themselves or with other kids…
Favorite Toys For Children in Almost Every Country Worldwide
…but what toys are considered favorites in almost every country around the world?
To find out the answer to that question, a list of popular toys was created from categories outlined by the Toy Association and Wikipedia — then they were cross-referenced with popular toy round-ups such as The 9 Best Construction and Building Blocks for Gifted Kids of 2021 from verywellfamily.com. Monthly searches were gathered using Google for each toy in each country and isolated those with the highest search volume to reveal the most popular in each category. The data was gathered in October 2021.
I have been given express written permission to use the illustrations, maps, and the verbatim text from this article — which was written by G. John Cole from TheToyZone — of favorite toys for children in almost each country in the world. While TheToyZone has endeavored to ensure the information provided is accurate and current, it cannot guarantee it. Neither TheToyZone nor The Gate accept liability for the information which is presented in this article.
Every Country’s Favorite Children’s Toy
In 2020, Santa got jabbed to save Christmas. This year, he might need to shop on eBay.
Flying around the world won’t be a problem. But with supply chains in a tangle, Saint Nick needs to be imaginative with second-hand gifting – or face inflated prices for in-demand toys from opportunistic eBay sellers.
Santa does have a third option: diversify. Sure, every American kid wants a PS5 this year. But what else is big in 2021? TheToyZone analyzed Google Search data from around the world to see which toys anxious parents – uh, elves – are hunting for in every country on Earth. And we’ve mapped every favorite toy in every category so Santa can spot a winner for your little angels.
North America: PlayStation 4 is Most-Searched Toy
The PlayStation 4 is the most popular toy in the highest number of countries, both worldwide and within North America. Although the PS5 has just celebrated its one-year birthday, it lags in popularity next to its predecessor. Nine countries in North America search for the PS4 more than any toy, and just three search mostly for the PS5 (Bahamas, US, Virgin Islands).
Why is the PS4 outsearching the PS5? Availability. Every good elf knows the newer model is sold out online and IRL, partly due to supply (semiconductors are hard to come by these days) and partly due to demand (everybody’s a gamer in lockdown). Even when stock does pop up, it is unlikely to be marked down in price because – why would they? Meanwhile, the older console still packs a punch and is more affordable, which makes a difference in some of the PS4 territories above.
South America: Barbie and PS4 Neck-and-Neck
The PS5 doesn’t even feature among the most-searched toy across South American countries. But the PS4 secures top place in four countries, tying with a more old-skool rival: Barbie. The definitive doll brand has a long tradition of representing Latin American culture, and Chilean athlete Francisca Mardones became the first Paralympic to get her own Barbie this year.
“I never imagined that one day I would tell you that I have become the first Chilean barbie,” tweeted Mardones. “Many thanks to @Barbie for the emotional tribute! I am overwhelmed with emotion to see a Paralympic shotput barbie.” However, the Nintendo Switch remains Chile’s favorite toy.
Europe: Lego and PlayStation 5 Among Europe’s Favorite Toys
Lockdown didn’t only boost gaming: it boosted sales of Danish-branded toy building bricks. But Lego’s killer move was pairing up with Nintendo for a best-selling Super Mario starter set. (Opening 91 Lego stores in China didn’t hurt, either.) Lego is the most popular toy in 11 European countries, edging out the PS5 (ten countries) and PS4 (nine).
Another plastic classic proved more popular in Europe than elsewhere. Playmobil is the most-searched toy in six European countries, but nowhere outside of Europe. The German ‘creative toy system’ remains popular on its home continent despite an Anya Taylor-Joy-starring movie widely considered “dull, dumb, and forgettable” that “does not even work as a commercial, never showing us why these toys could be especially fun to play with.”
Middle East & Central Asia: PlayStation Dominates, Barbie and Lego Follow
The PS4 and PS5 dominate much of the Middle East. Barbie, Lego, and the Xbox are most popular in just six of the 20 countries in this region. The LEGO Foundation is engaged in the region, providing ‘learning through play’ for marginalized children in Afghanistan, Kyrgyzstan, Pakistan, and Tajikistan.
Barbie is biggest in Azerbaijan and Turkey. Along with Tajikistan (Lego), these are the only countries in the region that favor ‘real’ toys over consoles. Turkish writer and comedian Gulse Birsel got the Barbie treatment for the original doll’s 60th birthday. There was also an unofficial Ottoman Empire Ken available for $800 – his modders transitioned him from an original Speed Racer Ken.
Rest of Asia & Oceania: Ludo and Slime Among Niche Favorites
The PS4 owns this region and is the most popular toy in nine countries. The PS5 adds another four territories to Sony’s haul on this side of the planet. Demand for the rare PlayStation 5 is so intense that a riotbroke out in a Tokyo store when rumors of a restock broke. Kind of brings to mind Frank Costanza, doesn’t it? “As I rained blows upon him, I realized there had to be another way!”
With the cross-cultural thirst for semiconductor-driven gaming toys, it’s refreshing to find two countries in this region with classic analogue tastes. Ludo is a strategy board game based on an ancient Indian game, repackaged by the Brits in 1896. And for some reason, Ludo always has a Snakes N’ Ladders game on the other side of the board – including in Pakistan, where it is the most popular toy. The other nation with a tactile toy for its favorite is Bangladesh, where they favor Slime.
Africa: Barbie Is The Most Popular Toy Across 15 African Countries
Barbie is the most popular toy in Africa, if PlayStations 4 and 5 are considered separate toys. The doll is most popular in 15 countries, followed by PS4 (13) and PS5 (6). Although an African-American character (Christie) and African-American Barbie were first released in 1968 and 1980, the first African-African Barbie doll didn’t appear until 2019, in the form of South African singer Lerato “Lira” Molapo.
Finally, Monopoly makes its only map appearance in Nigeria. The 86-year-old board game exists in two authorized Nigerian-themed versions: the Lagos city edition (“For attempting to bribe a law enforcement agent, pay a fine”) and an edition celebrating the centenary of the 1914 amalgamation of Nigeria under a central colonial administration. The latter includes more wholesome Opportunity cards containing “strong social messages.”
The World’s Favorite Toys… by Category
Next up, we mapped the most-searched toy in each category. Scroll down to see the favorite consoles, dolls, construction toys, classics, board games, ‘90s toys, TV merch, and superhero figures in every country.
90s Toys
The ‘90s is the decade that won’t let go. Children of the 1990s are the parents of children today, and – like a Boomer touting his record collection – they know that the Furby (9 countries), the Game Boy (27), and Polly Pocket (21) will never be bettered. Thankfully, ‘90s kids are also running the toy industry, so perennial favorites like the Tamagotchi (22) are getting reinvented all the time.
Consoles
Sony’s PlayStation dominates the world map as the most-searched console brand in 112 countries. The PS4 is number one in 71 countries, and even the ol’ PS3 remains popular, mostly in African and Asian markets. Xboxes of various flavors are top in 40 countries while Nintendo is most-searched in 18.
TV Toys
Take that, Peppa Pig! The ubiquitous oinker is fave in just four countries, while Paw Patrol runs off with 25, including the US and UK. The show is targeted at that sweet spot of 2-6-year-olds: just old enough to watch TV (remember parents: no screen time for <2yos) and compose a Christmas list, but just young enough that the swag is affordable.
Classic Toys
What makes a classic a classic? A name that gives you goosebumps and/or a host of cheap imitators is a good start. Barbie dominates this category but branded and unbranded toys of varying nature also make an impact: slime (21 countries), Nerf (20), Rubik’s Cube (18), and Hot Wheels (16).
An honorable mention goes to simple, wholesome classics like the yoyo (10), Mr. Potato Head (3), and Hula Hoop (still number one in Austria and Germany!). The humble hoop was once banned in Russia for representing “the emptiness of American culture.”
Board Games
Before gaming, there was board gaming. And board gaming will live on a long time: some of the best are social, exemplify great design, and flick a certain switch in the brains of a dedicated army of super-fans. Just look at the top ones around the world, whose names remain better known than any hundred-million-grossing video game. Most common favorites are Monopoly (50 countries), Ludo (33), Scrabble (23).
Dolls
Barbie is the best-travelled doll, with 68 countries ranking her as their favorite. A bigger surprise is the international success of American Girl Doll, which is most-searched in 11 countries across four continents. Maybe folk who can’t remember the name of Barbie just search “American girl doll” hoping for a reminder?
Building & Construction Toys
We live in a Lego world, with the classic brick dominating 82 countries. Lego’s Scandi neighbor, Brio, offers a wooden alternative of Swedish toy transport network toys. Brio is most-searched in eight, mostly African, countries. Both brands continue to prosper despite Lego’s patent expiring and Brio’s compatibility with rival brands.
Superhero Toys
Superheroes: encouraging kids to swing recklessly from toilet chains since 1936! Thankfully, deep beneath the veneer of corporate hegemony, superhero characters are designed with heart, imagination, and color. Batman and Spiderman are each top of the list in 23 countries, with Harley Quinn taking four (Argentina, France, Italy, and Turkey) and Wonder Woman wowing Japan. At least the plastic figures won’t break your toilet chain.
Wherever you are in the world, balancing the must-have popularity of certain toys against their cost, development benefits and – these days – availability is a game in itself. Whatever your budget, the best weapon you can bring to the challenge is your imagination.
Curious what the most popular toys in each category are in your country? Check out our full data in the interactive table below!
Final Boarding Call
During my early formative years, my father would come home from work and have me reach into his pocket, from which I pulled a shiny new Matchbox toy car.
Losing its luster years ago, I still have an old silver Greyhound bus to this day which is missing the white plastic seats and small staircase that were once inside of it; the logo which was affixed on the sides of the bus are long gone; and it barely rolls anymore — but I cherish it immensely.
I was probably four or five years old when I pulled this toy — one of many which I had collected — out of his pocket.
I used to use my imagination and create entire cities and landscapes using my bed, other furniture, and even window sills with my collection of both Matchbox and Hot Wheels vehicles — I preferred Matchbox; but both brands are now owned by Mattel — and I used to use books for buildings and city blocks; and pillows and blankets for the mountains. I would build bridges; had a working traffic light, had a box of small colored wooden blocks which would stick together with which I would form telephone poles; and I would even take large sheets of heavy stock paper to draw highways with lanes on them in which the vehicles fit perfectly and lay them down on the floor.
My friends were so impressed with my efforts that they would come over to play on my creations…
…and when my son Matthew Cohen — who occasionally writes articles here at The Gate about his travels — was younger and had tracks for both trains and vehicles, the child in me would return and I built several elaborate setups for him, which he we both enjoyed immensely.
I firmly believe that these imaginative playtimes — both when I was a child and when Matthew was a child — contributed towards our passion for travel: cities? Landscapes? Architecture? Different types of vehicles around the world?
We are there to fuel our passions.
Other ideas for gifts for children for this holiday season — with no affiliate links; and I prefer to give the gift of travel anyway, as I believe travel is the best way for children to learn about the world — which are included here at The Gate are these articles:
- The Most Popular Books For Children in Almost Every Country in The World
- The Most Popular Pokémon Around The World
Photograph ©2017 by Brian Cohen.