Deformed figures — sometimes called chibi — are stylized characters with oversized heads, tiny bodies, and exaggerated expressions. They sit in a different shelf-space from scale figures: smaller (4-10 cm), cheaper ($30-$100 typical), often more playful, and frequently sold with swappable face plates and accessories. P-Rex Hobby carries the deepest selection of Deformed Figures in North America across every major chibi line — Nendoroid, Look Up, Q Posket, Figuarts mini, and dozens more.
Where to start (by collector type)
Your first chibi figure. Start with Nendoroid from Good Smile Company. They're the de facto chibi standard at $60-$80, articulated, and ship with multiple face plates and accessories — you can pose them differently every week. Pick a character you love rather than chasing rare ones first.
"I just want to display, no fiddling." Choose MegaHouse Look Up figures (cute head-tilted-up pose, no swappable parts, $50-$80) or Q Posket prize figures from Banpresto ($30-$50, mass-market). Both are pre-built — open box, place on shelf, done.
Pose-changing collector. Nendoroid is unmatched here — most figures have 3 face plates, multiple hand options, and accessories that interact (Hatsune Miku has her leek; Kirito has his swords). Figuarts mini from Bandai Tamashii is similar but more articulated; Cu-Poche from Kotobukiya goes further with full body articulation.
Diorama builder. MegaHouse Petitrama ($40-$80) is purpose-built for chibi diorama scenes — JoJo, One Piece, and other IPs in 4-figure sets with environmental bases. Mega Cat Project turns characters into cats — it's a cult favorite among One Piece, Demon Slayer, and Jujutsu Kaisen fans.
Impulse / under-$30 buyer. Bandai's prize-tier lines fit here: WCF (World Collectable Figure, ~$15-$25, 7 cm), Adverge (~$10-$15 candy-toy mini chibis, 3 cm), and Rowtashii Noise. All cute, all small enough to line up by the dozens.
Limited-edition hunter. Nendoroid releases include event-exclusive variants (often 30-50% color/accessory differences from regular release) that close pre-orders within hours and routinely 2-3x in aftermarket. Goodsmile Online Shop exclusives and US Comic Con variants are the most-watched.
Browse by price tier
-
Under $30 — Bandai WCF / Adverge / prize-tier chibis, smaller candy-toy figures. Impulse buys.
-
$30-60 — Q Posket (Banpresto), Petitrama, HELLO! GOOD SMILE, basic prize figures.
-
$60-100 — Nendoroid standard, Look Up, Figuarts mini, Cu-Poche, Mega Cat Project larger sets.
-
$100+ — Nendoroid Doll full sets, premium-edition Nendoroids, special collaboration releases.
Featured lines
Nendoroid (Good Smile Company) — the iconic chibi line, ~10 cm tall, articulated head, swappable face plates and accessories. Coverage is enormous: anime, games, Vocaloid, comics, original characters. Most retail at $60-$80. Special editions (event exclusives, online-shop exclusives) routinely appreciate.
MegaHouse Look Up — pre-built chibi figures with the signature "head tilted up to look at you" pose. No accessories, no fiddling, just pure display cuteness. $50-$80. 430 products. Strong on JoJo, One Piece, Demon Slayer, Bocchi the Rock.
Q Posket (Banpresto) — prize-tier chibi figures, $30-$50. Lots of Disney, anime, and game IPs. Distinct soft-color paint style. Mass-market.
Figuarts mini (Bandai Tamashii Nations) — chibi articulated figures from the same studio that makes S.H.Figuarts. More poseable than Nendoroid in some ways but smaller selection. Strong on Demon Slayer, JoJo, Dragon Ball.
Cu-Poche (Kotobukiya) — full-body articulated chibis with switchable hands, faces, outfits. More complex than Nendoroid but smaller catalog. Cult favorite for character customization.
Mega Cat Project (MegaHouse) — characters reimagined as cats. Sounds gimmicky; viewing the actual figures changes minds. One Piece "Wanted Cats" series is the most popular.
PETITRAMA (MegaHouse) — small-scale chibi diorama sets. JoJo's Bizarre Adventure is the most-collected; figures pose with environmental bases that connect across the line.
HELLO! GOOD SMILE — Good Smile's entry-level chibi line, $40-$60. Simpler than Nendoroid but still articulated. Good gateway for kids/gift buyers.
WCF (World Collectable Figure, Bandai) and Adverge (Bandai candy toy) — small prize-tier chibis at $10-$25. WCF is 7 cm; Adverge is 3 cm. Mostly Dragon Ball, One Piece, Naruto, Demon Slayer.
Rowtashii Noise (Bandai Tamashii Nations) — chibi prize line.
Square Enix BRIGHT ARTS GALLERY — chibi figures of Final Fantasy and Dragon Quest IPs (Tonberry, Cactuar, Monokuma, Chocobo).
Nendoroid Doll (Good Smile Company) — separate line from regular Nendoroid: ~14 cm fabric-bodied posable dolls with full outfit changes. Different proportions, different scale. Treat as its own category — outfit sets are sold separately.
Deformed vs scale figure
-
Style — Deformed figures use exaggerated chibi proportions (large head, small body). Scale figures are realistic-proportion representations.
-
Size — Deformed: 4-10 cm typical. Scale: 18-30+ cm.
-
Articulation — Nendoroid/Figuarts mini/Cu-Poche have moveable parts. Look Up, Q Posket, Petitrama are fixed-pose.
-
Accessories — Nendoroid ships with multiple faces, hands, weapons. Most other chibi lines have minimal or no accessories.
-
Price — Deformed: $15-$100 typical. Scale figures: $80-$300.
-
Display footprint — Deformed lines fit 5-10 figures in the space of one scale figure.
Frequently asked questions
I'm new to Nendoroid — which one should I buy first?
Pick a character you love rather than the most popular release. Almost every Nendoroid has the same articulation and similar accessory count, so the franchise/character matters more than the line variant. If you have no preference: Nendoroid Hatsune Miku (the original), any Demon Slayer release, or Spy x Family Anya are widely available with reliable stock.
How do I tell a real Nendoroid from a bootleg?
Bootleg Nendoroids are common. Tells: paint applications look dull or smeared (eyes are the giveaway), the box feels thinner, hot stamp on bottom of box is smudged or missing, accessories don't snap properly. Authentic Nendoroids ship with a printed certificate of authenticity inside the inner tray. P-Rex Hobby ships only authorized stock, sealed from Good Smile distributors.
Pre-orders close fast — how do I not miss them?
Most Nendoroid pre-orders close 2-4 months after announcement. Limited editions and event exclusives close within hours. Set P-Rex restock alerts on the products you want — you'll get notified the moment a product goes from announcement to orderable.
Nendoroid Doll vs regular Nendoroid — what's the difference?
Different scale, different bodies, different accessories. Nendoroid Doll has a fabric-bodied 14 cm figure with cloth outfits; regular Nendoroid is plastic, 10 cm, with face-plate accessories. Outfit sets sold separately for Nendoroid Doll. The two lines don't share parts.
Will my chibi figure increase in value?
Most regular Nendoroid releases hold value or depreciate slightly. Limited editions and event exclusives often appreciate 50-200% within 1-2 years if the production run sells out. Q Posket and prize figures rarely appreciate (they're mass-produced). For investment, focus on Goodsmile Online Shop exclusives and event-only Nendoroids.
How do I display so many small figures?
Acrylic risers and 4-tier display shelves keep chibis visible without overcrowding. Most collectors group by series. Avoid direct sunlight (paint fades over months). For Nendoroid, the included display stands are essential — keep them.
What about Pop Up Parade — is that deformed?
No — Pop Up Parade figures are scale figures (1/8-ish, 17-18 cm tall). They're priced like deformed figures ($30-$50) but use realistic proportions, not chibi. Worth checking out separately if you want fixed-pose budget figures.
What's not covered by the Damage & Loss Insurance?
Optional Damage & Loss Insurance covers transit damage and lost packages, but not theft after delivery. Useful for $200+ orders or any premium chibi multi-pack.
Are Nendoroid Petite still available?
Nendoroid Petite was a discontinued sub-line of smaller (5 cm) Nendoroids. Production ended in 2014 — anything you find now is secondary market. We don't carry them new.