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Warner Bros. Consumer Products has partnered with Toybox, a company specialised in 3D printers that allow fans to create their own toys at home, to enable audiences to print characters from across the Warner Bros. portfolio.
Marked by many as a major step forward in the ongoing development and evolution of the 3D printing space and its implications for the future of the toy industry, the new partnership will allow Toybox fans the chance to print items based on DC, Cartoon Network, Looney Tunes, Friends, even Seinfeld.
The deal also extends to classic films under the Warner Bros. banner, such as Polar Express and Elf.
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Warner Bros. Consumer Products has partnered with Toybox, a company specialised in 3D printers that allow fans to create their own toys at home, to enable audiences to print characters from across the Warner Bros. portfolio.
Marked by many as a major step forward in the ongoing development and evolution of the 3D printing space and its implications for the future of the toy industry, the new partnership will allow Toybox fans the chance to print items based on DC, Cartoon Network, Looney Tunes, Friends, even Seinfeld.
The deal also extends to classic films under the Warner Bros. banner, such as Polar Express and Elf.
They went into the Tank seeking an investment of $150,000 in exchange for 5 percent equity, and accepted Kevin “Mr. Wonderful” O’Leary’s offer of $150k for 13 percent with 2 percent in advisory shares.
O’Leary mentioned wanting to license the Toybox technology and that’s exactly what the company has been busy doing since the
Shark Tank originally aired in March 2019.
In March 2020, Toybox Labs announced its first licensing deal. Toybox users are now able to print out 3D versions of characters from the
Dennis & Gnasher show, a popular series in the UK produced by London-based
Beano Studios.
And in October 2020, Toybox Labs announced it received an investment from