
It's lampshaded when one of the kids comments how much they remind them of their usual villains.


Money Fetish: Beau Weasel is all about the money he loves the clink of nickels, dimes, and quarters, but gold is even better.Mix-and-Match Critters: The BunnyBees have the striped body of a bee and the head of a bunny.Intimate Marks: The toys have the signature of Xavier Roberts on their buttocks.Hair-Raising Hare: Cabbage Jack is an anthropomorphic jackrabbit who helps Lavender kidnap the kids.Guilt-Based Gaming: According to the backstory, every Cabbage Patch Kid was in danger of being enslaved by the evil Lavender McDade to work in her gold mine, and only adopting them could set them free-so if your parents couldn't adopt a Kid, they'd suffer forever.Greed: All three of the villains are motivated by greed-Lavender and Beau Weasel by the promise of gold, and Cabbage Jack by all the cabbages he can eat.Delivery Stork: Colonel Casey of the Animated Adaptation.Born from Plants: Cabbage Patch Kids are born in cabbage patches.
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The dolls had a number of interesting gimmicks. Despite this, the toys eventually saw a revival and maintain a devoted following to this day. The line continued in a smaller vein, going through a series of companies, from Colēco to Hasbro to Mattel, but have largely become a historical footnote.

The dolls became a big hit, inspiring books and an animated Christmas special, but the craze peaked and fell around 1988. Initially sold at craft shows, the dolls took off and in 1982, he rebranded them as "Cabbage Patch Kids" and created a backstory involving a young boy named Xavier Roberts following a BunnyBee and discovering the world of the eponymous kids. In 1978, Xavier Roberts started marketing a set of cloth dolls with exaggerated features of a baby under the name of Little People.
