1999 Burger King promotional Pokémon toys: Difference between revisions

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[[File:1999BurgerKingPoster.png|thumb|right|150px|A poster advertising the promotion]]
[[File:Burger King Pokemon 1999 poster.jpg|thumb|right|250px|A Burger King poster advertising the Pokémon promotion.]]
The '''1999 Burger King Promotional Pokémon toys''' were a set of toys distributed with Kids Meals at Burger King in 1999. All toys were paired with a trading card, which were made exclusively for this promotion. The toys were used to promote ''[[M01|Pokémon: The First Movie]]''. There are 60 toys in total. There were also a set of six 23-karat gold plated cards which came in Poké Balls that were available to buy at the restaurant chain that year. The promotion used the slogan "Gotta Catch 'Em Here!", a parody of the Pokémon slogan "[[Gotta Catch 'Em All!]]".
The '''1999 Burger King promotional Pokémon toys''' were a set of toys distributed with Kids Meals at Burger King from November 8 to December 31, 1999.<ref name="nintendo">[http://web.archive.org/web/20000302091852/http://www.nintendo.com/corp/press/110199a.html POKéMON™ COMING TO BURGER KING®] (archive)</ref> All toys were paired with [[1999 Burger King trading cards|trading cards]], which were made exclusively for this promotion. The toys were used to promote ''[[M01|Pokémon: The First Movie]]''.


A promotional poster was also distributed at restaurants which had run out of toys (a common occurrence as this was at the height of Pokémon's popularity). The paper "Burger King crown" was also given a Pokémon edition.
There are 59 toys in total (although it was promoted as 57 due to 3 of the toys being variants of each other). There were also a set of six 23-karat gold plated cards which came in Poké Balls that were available to buy at the restaurant chain that year. The promotion used the slogan "Gotta catch 'em here!", a snowclone of the Pokémon slogan "[[Gotta catch 'em all!]]".
 
Coinciding with the VHS release of ''[[M01|Pokémon: The First Movie]]'', from March 13 to March 26, 2000, Burger King once again distributed the 59 Pokémon toys, giving customers one more chance to complete the collection.


==Gold cards==
==Gold cards==
[[File:BurgerKingGoldSet.png|225px|thumb|right|All six, in their packaging]]
[[File:BurgerKingGoldSet.png|225px|thumb|All six, in their packaging]]
The gold cards came in either a blue or red box, with images of the Pokémon, the card, and the whole set of trading cards. The card is a thick piece of 23 karat gold plated metal in a plastic cover, with a picture on the front and back, and Pokédex data on the back. It also came with a certificate of authenticity signed by the chairman of NOA at the time.
Starting on November 15, customers could purchase one of six gold cards for $1.99 with the purchase of a meal.<ref name="nintendo"/><ref>[https://web.archive.org/web/19991128200659/http://pocket.ign.com/news/11772.html Pokémon Toys at Burger King] IGN (archive)</ref>
Both the card and the certificate are contained in a plastic Poké Ball with a shiny red top, with a button for opening and closing.
 
*{{p|Charizard}}: Spits fire that is hot enough to melt boulders. Known to cause forest fires unintentionally. Evolution: {{p|Charmander}} → {{p|Charmeleon}} → '''Charizard'''
The gold cards came in either a blue or red box; with images of the Pokémon, the card, and the whole set of trading cards. The card is a thick piece of 23 karat gold plated metal in a plastic cover, with a picture on the front and back, and [[Pokédex]] data on the back. It also came with a certificate of authenticity signed by {{wp|Howard Lincoln}}, the Chairman of Nintendo of America.
*{{p|Jigglypuff}}
 
*{{p|Mewtwo}}: It was created by a scientist after years of horrific gene splicing and DNA engineering experiments. Evolution: Mewtwo
Both the card and the certificate are contained in a plastic {{i|Poké Ball}} with a shiny red top and white bottom, with a button for opening and closing.
*{{p|Pikachu}}
 
*{{p|Poliwhirl}}: Capable of living in and out of water. When out of water, it sweats to keep its body slimy. Evolution: {{p|Poliwag}} → '''Poliwhirl''' → {{p|Poliwrath}}
=== Card descriptions ===
*{{p|Togepi}}: Information on Togepi unknown at this time!! Evolution: ?
{| class="roundtable" style="margin:auto; background:#{{bulba color light}}; border: 5px solid #{{bulba color}}"
! Pokémon
! Description
|-
| style="text-align: center;" | {{p|Charizard}}
| Spits fire that is hot enough to melt boulders. Known to cause forest fires unintentionally.
 
Evolution: {{p|Charmander}} → {{p|Charmeleon}} → '''Charizard'''
|-
| style="text-align: center;" | {{p|Jigglypuff}}
| When its huge eyes light up, it sings a mysteriously soothing melody that lulls its enemies to sleep.
 
Evolution: '''Jigglypuff''' → {{p|Wigglytuff}} ([[Moon Stone|Moon Stone)]]
|-
| style="text-align: center;" | {{p|Mewtwo}}
| It was created by a scientist after years of horrific gene splicing and DNA engineering experiments.
 
Evolution: '''Mewtwo'''
|-
| style="text-align: center;" | {{p|Pikachu}}
| When several of these Pokémon gather, their electricity could build and cause lightning storms.
 
Evolution: '''Pikachu''' → {{p|Raichu}} ([[Thunder Stone]])
|-
| style="text-align: center;" | {{p|Poliwhirl}}
| Capable of living in and out of water. When out of water, it sweats to keep its body slimy.
 
Evolution: {{p|Poliwag}} → '''Poliwhirl''' → {{p|Poliwrath}}
|-
| style="text-align: center;" | {{p|Togepi}}
| Information on Togepi unknown at this time!!
 
Evolution: ?
|}


==Pokémon Toys==
==Pokémon Toys==
Line 89: Line 124:
*{{p|Pikachu}} C says "''Pika-chu''" when pressed.
*{{p|Pikachu}} C says "''Pika-chu''" when pressed.


==Controversy==
==Recall==
That very same year, the toys were recalled. Two infants suffocated to death when half of the outer portion of the Poké Ball covered their mouth and nose cutting off their air supply. <ref>[http://media.www.cm-life.com/media/storage/paper906/news/2000/02/02/News/Burger.King.Announces.Toy.Recall-2478861.shtml Burger King Announces Toy Recall] (retrieved December 21, 2009)</ref> This lead to [[Hasbro]] putting air holes in their [[Poké Ball]] toys.
[[File:Burger King 1999 Pokemon Warning.jpg|thumb|The warning of the Burger King Poké Ball recall, published on December 27, 1999]]
In December 1999, the Poké Balls that the toys came in were recalled. Two infants suffocated to death when half of the outer portion of the Poké Ball covered their mouth and nose cutting off their air supply.<ref>[http://web.archive.org/web/20090315001903/http://media.www.cm-life.com/media/storage/paper906/news/2000/02/02/News/Burger.King.Announces.Toy.Recall-2478861.shtml Burger King Announces Toy Recall] (retrieved March 15, 2009)</ref> This led to [[Hasbro]] putting air holes in their {{i|Poké Ball}} toys.
 
==Trivia==
*A promotional poster was distributed at restaurants which had run out of toys (a common occurrence as this was at the height of Pokémon's popularity).
*The paper "Burger King crown" was also given a Pokémon edition.
 
==Gallery==
<gallery>
1999BurgerKingPoster.png|Burger King Pokémon poster with all the toys
Burger_King_Pokemon_1999_poster_2.jpg|Another poster from the promotion
Burger_King_Pokemon_1999_poster_3.jpg|A poster displayed in the restaurants during early November 1999
Burger_King_Pokemon_1999_checklist.jpg|Burger King Pokémon toys checklist paper
Burger King toys 1999 article page 1.png|Article showcasing the toys (incorrectly shows {{p|Clefairy}} toy in place of {{p|Nidorino}} toy)
Burger King toys 1999 article page 2.png|Article showcasing the toys
Burger King toys 1999 article page 3.png|Article showcasing the toys (incorrectly shows {{p|Bulbasaur}} toy in place of {{p|Diglett}} toy)
Burger_King_1999_Checklist_front.jpg|A checklist showcasing all available Pokémon to collect
BK_1999_Gold_plates_flyer.jpg|A flyer advertising the gold-plated trading cards
Burger_King_1999_Checklist_back.jpg|The back of the checklist, continuing all available Pokémon to collect
Burger King 1999 Pokemon Newspaper.jpg|A fragment from a newspaper on Wednesday November 10, 1999
Burger King Pokemon 1999 Newspaper 2.jpg|A fragment from Miami's The Associated Press on Saturday November 13, 1999
Burger_King_2000_VHS_poster.jpg|A poster from the March 2000 promotion re-release
</gallery>
 
==External links==
*[http://web.archive.org/web/20000302001440/http://www.pokemon.com/news/bktradingnights.html Pokémon.com page] (archive)
* {{wp|Burger King Pokémon container recall|Wikipedia article about the recall}}


==References==
==References==
{{reflist}}
{{reflist}}


{{Burger King}}
{{-}}
 
{{Fast food toys}}<br>
{{Project Merchandise notice|toy}}
{{Project Merchandise notice|toy}}
[[Category:Merchandise]]

Latest revision as of 01:29, 19 March 2024

A Burger King poster advertising the Pokémon promotion.

The 1999 Burger King promotional Pokémon toys were a set of toys distributed with Kids Meals at Burger King from November 8 to December 31, 1999.[1] All toys were paired with trading cards, which were made exclusively for this promotion. The toys were used to promote Pokémon: The First Movie.

There are 59 toys in total (although it was promoted as 57 due to 3 of the toys being variants of each other). There were also a set of six 23-karat gold plated cards which came in Poké Balls that were available to buy at the restaurant chain that year. The promotion used the slogan "Gotta catch 'em here!", a snowclone of the Pokémon slogan "Gotta catch 'em all!".

Coinciding with the VHS release of Pokémon: The First Movie, from March 13 to March 26, 2000, Burger King once again distributed the 59 Pokémon toys, giving customers one more chance to complete the collection.

Gold cards

All six, in their packaging

Starting on November 15, customers could purchase one of six gold cards for $1.99 with the purchase of a meal.[1][2]

The gold cards came in either a blue or red box; with images of the Pokémon, the card, and the whole set of trading cards. The card is a thick piece of 23 karat gold plated metal in a plastic cover, with a picture on the front and back, and Pokédex data on the back. It also came with a certificate of authenticity signed by Howard Lincoln, the Chairman of Nintendo of America.

Both the card and the certificate are contained in a plastic Poké Ball with a shiny red top and white bottom, with a button for opening and closing.

Card descriptions

Pokémon Description
Charizard Spits fire that is hot enough to melt boulders. Known to cause forest fires unintentionally.

Evolution: CharmanderCharmeleonCharizard

Jigglypuff When its huge eyes light up, it sings a mysteriously soothing melody that lulls its enemies to sleep.

Evolution: JigglypuffWigglytuff (Moon Stone)

Mewtwo It was created by a scientist after years of horrific gene splicing and DNA engineering experiments.

Evolution: Mewtwo

Pikachu When several of these Pokémon gather, their electricity could build and cause lightning storms.

Evolution: PikachuRaichu (Thunder Stone)

Poliwhirl Capable of living in and out of water. When out of water, it sweats to keep its body slimy.

Evolution: PoliwagPoliwhirlPoliwrath

Togepi Information on Togepi unknown at this time!!

Evolution: ?

Pokémon Toys

Launchers

Light-ups

Key Chains

Poké Beanbags

Spinners

Squirters

Talking

  • Pikachu A says "Pikachu" when pressed.
  • Pikachu B says "Pika Pika Pika" when pressed.
  • Pikachu C says "Pika-chu" when pressed.

Recall

The warning of the Burger King Poké Ball recall, published on December 27, 1999

In December 1999, the Poké Balls that the toys came in were recalled. Two infants suffocated to death when half of the outer portion of the Poké Ball covered their mouth and nose cutting off their air supply.[3] This led to Hasbro putting air holes in their Poké Ball toys.

Trivia

  • A promotional poster was distributed at restaurants which had run out of toys (a common occurrence as this was at the height of Pokémon's popularity).
  • The paper "Burger King crown" was also given a Pokémon edition.

Gallery

External links

References


Fast-food chain promotional Pokémon toys
KFC: 1998
Burger King: 19992000200820092019
Wendy's: 2003
Subway: 2005
McDonald's: 200220032004200520062011
201220132014201520162017
20182019202120222023


Project Merchandise logo.png This toy article is part of Project Merchandise, a Bulbapedia project that aims to write comprehensive articles on all Pokémon toys, dolls, books, and collectible merchandise.