Hasbro just made a bold move with a beloved classic

Almost everyone has a Play-Doh memory. The smell, the texture, the way it dried out if you left the lid off. Hasbro has been sitting on that nostalgia for 70 years and this week it decided to do something new with it.

Hasbro launched Blooms by Play-Doh on July 9, the brand’s first product line aimed specifically at grown-ups. Instead of sculpting whatever you feel like, these kits walk you through making realistic floral arrangements you’d actually want to keep. It’s Play-Doh, but for your bookshelf.

What the kits look like and where to get them

Six kits are available right now, each themed around a different floral style and priced somewhere between $25 and $40, NBC News reported. Each one comes with the compound, tools, molds, a vase and a finishing spray: everything you need to actually complete the arrangement. Hasbro also sells refill packs separately if you want to keep going after the kit runs out.

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You can pick them up at Amazon, Target and Walmart, though not every retailer has all six. Hasbro has also put step-by-step tutorials on YouTube. On July 16, select kits go live on TikTok Shop for the first time.

The burnout numbers that convinced Hasbro to do this

Hasbro didn’t just guess that adults might want this. The company surveyed more than 10,000 adults globally before green-lighting the launch, according to its press release. About one in seven adults already use arts and crafts to decompress. Nearly 80% of Gen Z and Millennials say they feel burned out. That’s the market Hasbro is going after: people who want something to do with their hands that doesn’t involve a screen, and who want the finished result to actually look good enough to keep around.

Brian Baker, the Senior Vice President for Play-Doh at Hasbro, put it this way:

“The Play-Doh brand has always been about the limitless possibilities of imagination. That feeling doesn’t fade as you grow up, it evolves. Blooms by Play-Doh serves that need, offering a more elevated, hands-on way to slow down, get lost in the process and create something beautiful you can enjoy long after you’ve made it.”

The key word there is “long after.” Blooms isn’t being sold as something you play with and put away. It’s pitched as something you make, finish, and actually display. That also changes who you could give it to. A $40 floral craft kit with a vase included reads very differently as a gift than a toy does, which opens up a whole other reason someone might buy it beyond just personal use.

Adults buy differently from kids. They research more, spend more per purchase, and if they like something they come back for it.

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LEGO already showed this works

Hasbro isn’t the first toy company to try this. LEGO launched its botanical collection in 2021 under a line it called LEGO Sets for Adults, and those flower bouquets and bonsai trees became some of the brand’s best sellers. People buy them, build them, and put them on a shelf. The kits sell for $50 and up and nobody really thinks of them as toys anymore. That’s exactly the repositioning Hasbro is going for with Blooms.

Play-Doh is chasing the same buyer, Retail Dive reported. There are already established brands serving adult crafters in this space. FIMO and Sculpey have had the serious clay hobbyist market to themselves for years, but those brands are niche. Play-Doh has something they don’t. Almost every adult already knows what it is, how it smells, and how it feels. That’s a head start no marketing budget can buy.

Kristen McLean, VP of client insights at Circana’s Entertainment Knowledge Group, noted that “the toy industry’s promising start to 2026 reflects a unique intersection of resilient demand and evolving consumer behavior.” Hasbro’s Blooms launch sits right in the middle of that shift.

What this means for Hasbro beyond one product

Adults buy differently from kids. They research more, spend more per purchase, and if they like something they come back for it. Refill packs that keep someone making more arrangements are the kind of thing that doesn’t really exist in the children’s toy market. Hasbro is banking on that difference being meaningful here.

The TikTok Shop launch on July 16 is also telling. Grown-up craft buyers don’t browse toy aisles. They find things on social media, watch someone make it, and click through to buy it. Hasbro knows that, which is why it’s launching on TikTok the same week the kits go on shelves.

If Blooms catches on, it also raises a question Hasbro will probably start asking about its other brands. Monopoly, Nerf, Transformers, Dungeons and Dragons, Magic: The Gathering, all names with serious emotional pull among adults who grew up with them. Play-Doh going first is as much a test of the idea as it is a product launch.

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