Dungeons & Dragonsis getting one of the strangest versions of an iconic monster yet, courtesy of a crossover with another iconic Hasbro brand. Outside of dragons and mind flayers, there is no monster more iconic toD&Dthan the beholder. This terrifying aberration can kill or maim its opponents with powerful magical rays with various effects and can also incapacitate spellcasters with its anti-magic eye cone. While there are plenty of beholder variants that appear inD&Dlore, a new and bizarre version just popped into life thanks to WizKids.

WizKidshas announced that it’s makinga newD&D Icons of the Realms: Potato Head Beholder Boxed Miniature.The miniature combines aspects of the fan-favorite classic toy and the fan-favorite classic monster, with variant eye stalks, variant facial features, and even optional accessories to help customize the beholder. Additionally, the Potato Head Beholder can actually be used as a miniature in a tabletop combat sequence, as the miniature comes on the appropriate 50 mm base. The miniature will be released later this year with a retail price of $24.99. A convention-exclusive version is available as well.

D&D Monster Manual 2025 Cover Art showing an open-mouthed many-eyed Beholder looming behind heroic characters.

What To Expect From D&D’s Mr. Potato Head

Beholder Comes With Plenty Of Alternative Parts, Just Like A Normal Potato Head

The new miniature comes witha mix of familiar Potato Head accessories and beholder-specific parts. There are three central eye options, a bowler hat, and a single eyeglass (because beholders only have one main eye.) Additionally, the beholder will come with three different mouth variants, two of which incorporate standard Potato Head variants like a mustached mouth, and a standard fanged mouth. The full list of included accessories is below:

While many fans might balk at the idea of adding the Potato Head beholder in aD&Dcampaign, there’s actually an easy way to introduce the beholder in any world. Beholders “reproduce” by dreaming, soa beholder simply needs to dream of a Potato Head doll to create a Potato Head variant beholder. Alternatively, DMs could use a beholder’s fear of dismemberment to create a beholder creature with body parts that pop out. It also wouldn’t surprise me ifD&Dcreated its own Potato Head beholder statblock closer to release.

The two covers of Dragon Delves showing a variety of dragons

D&D Crossover Is Funny But Bizarre

More Crossovers Like This Please

At the end of the day,a Potato Head Beholder is the sort of goofy fun that Hasbro and its licensed partners should embrace. Things like this andD&D’stransforming Dicelingsreleased a few years ago are harmless, amusing toys that encourage fandom rather than trying to aggressively monetize or exploit it.

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The new dragon-focused anthology for Dungeons & Dragons could bring major changes to the game thanks to its unique art style, adding focus on style.

The response to these beholders has been pretty positive so far, even though they’re quite different fromtypicalD&Dminiatures. As a simple, fun concept with immediately understandable appeal, I’m guessing they will be a popular gift for casual and hardcoreDungeons & Dragonsfans over the next few months.

Dungeons and Dragons Game Poster