Walt Disney World has announced an exclusive meet & greet at EPCOT that’s coming as part of the V.I.Passholder Summer Days event. This shares details of the “popular” and “high demand” surprise character, but really is an excuse to finally cover a “big issue” Sarah has wanted to see addressed: Duffy’s needed comeback at Walt Disney World and Disneyland.
Before we get into the core point of the post, let’s cover the news out of Walt Disney World. Announced via the Passholder Buzz bulletin in the My Disney Experience app and Walt Disney World official website, APs can get a little extra magic to your summer when you meet a beloved Disney pal.
A popular Disney Character will be at Der Teddybar in the Germany Pavilion. They’ll be hanging out from 10:00 AM to 6:00 PM from June 9 through July 31, 2025. Don’t miss your chance to stop by for a hug and a photo. Due to possible high demand, Walt Disney World requests that guests arrive early to have an opportunity to join the queue.
Although the tease doesn’t reveal the character, it’s very obviously Duffy the Disney Bear.
Based on my extensive research (Googling “German Disney characters”), there are no other logical options for this meet & greet. Every other character with a Germany connection already meets regularly at Walt Disney World, so there’s no popular rare character that could cause high demand to the point that they cut the queue before 10 am.
I mean, I guess it could be Thunderbolt, the German Shepherd from One Hundred and One Dalmatians and the deuteragonist of the 2003 sequel 101 Dalmatians II: Patch’s London Adventure (thanks, Google). But that seems far-fetched. More likely is that the connection isn’t to Germany, but to Der Teddybar. And as far as famous Disney teddy bears go, Duffy is the man. If this is not a Duffy meet & greet, it’s gonna feel like an unnecessarily misleading tease.
As for how early you should arrive, that really depends on which day you visit. If you’re there on June 9-10 or even Duffy’s first weekend back, the line could be crazy. Duffy has a passionate fanbase, so we could be talking a multi-hour line. My best guess is that Disney will cut the line not because it’ll immediately be 8 hours, but rather, due to a lack of physical queue space around Der Teddybar.
With that out of the way, let’s go on the fascinating journey of Duffy. In the early 2000s, Duffy was developed by Walt Disney World’s merchandising team as an ancillary toy: Mickey’s teddy bear. He had a minor in-park presence, but he was never viewed or treated as a prominent character. Rather, he was a piece of merchandise. Not even Duffy–just the “Disney Bear.”
A few years after first debuting as the “Disney Bear” belonging to Mickey Mouse, Walt Disney Attractions Japan and the Oriental Land Company fleshed out his backstory and made him into a spotlight character. They reintroduced him as Duffy in 2005, at which time he was an immediate smash hit with guests at Tokyo DisneySea.
Five years later, this version of the character–now also known as Duffy in the United States–was reimported to Walt Disney World and Disneyland. Understandably, Disney wanted its own merchandising powerhouse for the U.S. parks, and made a huge push.
In addition to the plush bears and outfits for purchase, there was other merchandise and a character meet & greet to make the character something substantive. Pulling from the playbook used by OLC, Duffy was utilized largely in the stateside second gates: EPCOT and Disney California Adventure.
It didn’t work. Duffy flopped at Walt Disney World and Disneyland for the second and, at least for now, final time. Although he (apparently?) existed in some capacity at EPCOT and DCA until 2014, it was largely scaled back. What I remember is the merchandise sitting on shelves and the meet & greet seldom having a line.
That’s us below meeting Duffy way back in 2010, something we only did because he looked lonely standing there by himself. Generally speaking, we were not Duffy fans. It felt like a cash grab–or Disney trying to “make fetch happen.” It didn’t. Instead, it was apparent fairly immediately that Disney couldn’t will Duffy into being popular in the U.S. parks.
Duffy and Friends have subsequently appeared at every Disney theme park complex in the world. However, he’s most popular at the other Asia parks, Shanghai Disneyland and Hong Kong Disneyland plus Aulani, all of which also have exclusive Duffy merchandise.
Fast forward to today, and Duffy has since been given a veritable posse of pals: ShellieMay, his bear girlfriend; Tippy Blue, a mail-bird; Gelatoni, a cat artist; StellaLou, a dancing rabbit; CookieAnn, a baking dog; ‘Olu, a ukulele playing turtle; LinaBell, a curious fox. These characters all enjoy varying degrees of popularity among Duffy fans.
The newest, LinaBell, seems to be most popular at both Hong Kong Disneyland and Tokyo DisneySea. (But maybe my opinion is colored by the fact that we recently waited ~90 minutes to meet her on an otherwise slow day at HKDL. It was an accident, I swear.)
Duffy at the Walt Disney World and Disneyland Resort theme parks back in 2010 seems like a case study of trying to manufacture a ‘viral’ vehicle for more merchandise sales. Duffy was not a meaningful theme park character–without the greater context from his hometown in Cape Cod at Tokyo DisneySea, he looked like a generic ole teddy bear with very expensive outfits. As a result, Duffy came across as an attempt to find the next version of pin trading–a lucrative merchandise line that lends itself to repeat sales and special editions.
Disney tested the waters with several such merchandise lines during that timeframe, the most notable of which is Made with Magic/Glow with the Show. It was downright humorous to walk into the main gift shop in Paradise Pier at DCA and see racks of Duffy costumes and tables of Glow with the Show ears–the two primary product lines sold there–and see no one buying anything. That store probably set a record low in revenue per square foot for Disney retail back in those days.
Suffice to say, we were not fans of Duffy at Walt Disney World and Disneyland. When the character’s merchandise flopped and his meet & greets disappeared, that was fine by us. However, my opinion changed totally when we visited Tokyo DisneySea for the first time. There, it totally clicked–but was something different, as we explained at length back in The Duffy Phenomenon at Tokyo DisneySea.
In the years since that was first published, social media has broken down barriers. What when we started focusing on Tokyo Disney Resort, there was only one other English language site that covered it–and it hadn’t been updated in a while. That’s how we planned our first trip, which led to the massive disappointment that Mile Long Bar had been closed for years.
Nowadays, it seems like every single YouTuber and influencer has “discovered” TDR. It has become much more mainstream and accessible, which is great to see. This also means average domestic parks fans–even those who haven’t been to Japan–have visibility into what’s popular there. Disney importing Duffy felt like a crass cash grab back in 2010, but would hit differently today. Many fans love the bear because he’s essentially an ambassador for the best theme park in the world–a slice of Tokyo DisneySea in the American parks. Even if he is canonically from Massachusetts.
This is Sarah’s argument. “The fans have spoken and they want more Duffy,” she says. Sarah strongly believes, and perhaps accurately, that Duffy was just ahead of his time, and if he were introduced for the first time at Walt Disney World and Disneyland, he’d be a smash success.
Honestly, I’m not so sure. It’s one thing for the crowd to go wild at D23 Expo when Duffy and LinaBell appear on stage. There is more of a passionate audience for these characters than there was 15 years ago. Instead of hardcore fans dismissing Duffy as a cash grab, they’d embrace him. That part is fairly undeniable.
The question is whether Duffy has enough mainstream awareness and popularity to sustain a permanent in-park presence. Meaning that after the hardcore fans get their fix, would there be enough regular guests won over by Duffy & Friends?
It’s entirely possible that there would! Whereas Duffy was just 1-2 bears back in the early 2010s, he’s got a whole posse now! The Duffy Expanded Universe is compelling on its own, divorced from the DisneySea connection. All of that lore might be enough for the character meet & greet and merchandise to resonate at Walt Disney World or Disneyland.
I’m still skeptical. Duffy now has more meaningful context for Disney fans, but is that the case for regular ole park guests? What we Duffy diehards might fail to appreciate is that the character does still look like a regular ole teddy bear, and he still needs something of substance at Walt Disney World before he’ll cultivate interest and enthusiasm among regular guests.
One of the things that stuck out to me was the Duffy meet & greet during the Jollywood Nights Christmas Party at Disney’s Hollywood Studios. Towards the beginning of the event, Duffy had a 70 minute posted wait time. That gradually dropped to the point that there was literally no line whatsoever (0 minute wait) only a couple of hours later.
My theory was that there’s a relatively limited pool of Duffy diehards that prioritize him as #1, but most other guests don’t care. Once that initial rush is worked through, there’s only a trickle of guests throughout the rest of the event. I suspect we’ll see something somewhat similar with the EPCOT meet & greet for Annual Passholders, although the limited-time duration and exclusivity should buoy wait times.
I would hazard a guess that this logic would extend to normal park operations, and become even more exaggerated. That if Walt Disney World or Disneyland introduced a Duffy meet & greet, it would have a 4-hour wait on day one. That would drop to an hour later in week one, and 5 minutes in week two.
We’ve kind of seen this happen with the Figment meet & greet. Over a year after it debuted, Figment still does command a 15-20 minute line during his sets. But they’ve gotten criminally short and, admittedly, aren’t as popular as they once were. (Still much more so than the FigZilla meet in the late aughts.)
The difference between Duffy and Figment is that the latter has an attraction at EPCOT and organic popularity with Walt Disney World fans. There’s no natural Duffy presence at Walt Disney World–it’ll just be a meet & greet. This would be like if Figment suddenly got a meet & greet at Tokyo Disneyland. I’ll bet we’d see something similar: 7 hour lines on day one, dropping dramatically within weeks.
Or perhaps not–there are no Disney fans as hardcore as Japanese fans, so maybe they’d keep the Figment train rolling. It could be a Michael Jackson type scenario, with the Figment phenomenon sweeping Tokyo Disneyland being the actual key to a new Journey into Imagination! But I digress.
Ultimately, the smart play for Duffy at the domestic parks is trotting the character out sparingly at special events, limited-time engagements, and other scenarios where Duffy & Friends can generate buzz and excitement…but without overdoing it.
Let him grow more of a fanbase and establish roots at Walt Disney World and Disneyland in a more organic manner rather than an all-out blitz. That was a mistake the first time, and probably would end similarly the second go-round, even if things have changed somewhat.
That seems like what Walt Disney World is doing with (presumably!) adding a limited-time Duffy meet & greet to EPCOT. The new Celebrate Happy Cavalcade for Disneyland’s 70th Anniversary is another great example. I just saw this yesterday and was surprised that it’s still so popular and playing to massive crowds. That introduces Duffy and ShellieMay to guests in a careful manner, and could help with their popularity over time. Basically, what Disney appears to be doing right now is the smart approach.
Anyway, we look forward to meeting Duffy (hopefully!) during V.I.Passholder Summer Days, even if he should be in the American Adventure as a proud Masshole. It’ll be interesting to see how well this meet & greet is received, whether any merchandise is sold, and more as Walt Disney World continues to dip its toes into bringing back Duffy & Friends.
And even if our guess that Duffy is going to be meeting guests at Der Teddybar in the Germany Pavilion at EPCOT turns out to be wrong, well, at least you have this whole over-analysis of the Duffy phenomenon, how the people have spoken and demand more Duffy (according to Sarah), and why Walt Disney World and Disneyland should tread lightly (in my view) with his return. Stay tuned.
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YOUR THOUGHTS
Will you be taking advantage of the Der Teddybar meet & greet during V.I.PASSHOLDER Days? Agree or disagree that it’s obviously either Duffy or that random German Shepherd? What are your thoughts on a Duffy comeback at Walt Disney World and Disneyland? Think the people have spoken and demand the bear’s return? Or that Disney would be well-suited by taking a measured and methodical approach? Do you agree or disagree with our commentary? Any questions we can help you answer? Hearing your feedback–even when you disagree with us–is both interesting to us and helpful to other readers, so please share your thoughts below in the comments!