Chocolate Creations
Fruity & Chewy Confections
Unique Shapes & Textures
Candy Lore & Origins
Discontinued & Vaulted
200

This crispy candy features a core of malted milk surrounded by milk chocolate, traditionally sold in a milk carton style box

Whoppers

200

These stretchy, fruit-flavored taffy ropes are famous for their interactive packaging and inclusion of a tiny packet of sour sugar gel

Juicy Drop

200

These iconic, brightly colored marshmallow treats are shaped like baby chicks or bunnies and dominate springtime holiday baskets

Peeps

200

This popular candy brand's name is a direct mashup of its two main ingredients: sweet candy and tart citric acid flavors.

SweeTARTS

200

This multi-colored, fruit-flavored string of plastic beads attached to an elastic band was worn around the neck or wrist before being eaten

Candy Necklace

400

This multi-layered bar features a rich chocolate fudge center, a layer of soft caramel, crisp rice, and a peanut-loaded milk chocolate coating

Baby Ruth

400

This iconic British candy line features soft, sugar-dusted gummy buttons traditionally shaped like tiny infants

Jelly Babies

400

This rectangular, brightly colored hard candy brand started in 1954 and is famous for long, flat fruit sticks and fire-hot cinnamon flavors

Jolly Ranchers

400

This classic, paper-wrapped roll of chalky, colorful candy wafers is known as Rockets in Canada but goes by this name in the United States

Smarties

400

This 1990s Nestlé chocolate sphere contained a hidden, collectable plastic toy capsule inside, famously banned in the US due to choking hazards

Wonder Ball

600

This sweet treats company produces a golden-wrapped, hazelnut-filled confection surrounded by a delicate wafer and milk chocolate

Ferrero Rocher

600

This colorful, classic candy line features long, thin licorice-style laces that kids love to pull apart and knot together

Twizzlers Pull 'n' Peel

600

These small, colorful candy discs come pressed onto long, rolled sheets of white paper, requiring kids to peel them off with their teeth

Candy Buttons

600

This major confectionery brand got its start in Chicago in 1929, introducing a famous milk-caramel cube named after a popular comic strip character

Sugar Daddy

600

This ultra-popular 1990s Altoids spinoff came inside a round metal tin, offering an incredibly intense, sour fruit explosion before being discontinued

Altoids Sours

800

This nostalgic candy bar features a distinct blend of flaky, crispy peanut butter layers covered in a rich chocolate coating

Butterfinger

800

This smooth, ultra-chewy square candy brand uses a name that implies the fruit flavors will violently collide inside your mouth

Fruit Gushers

800

This interactive novelty candy features a plastic toilet bowl container filled with sour powder, meant for dipping candy plungers into

Sour Flush

800

This long, peanut-and-caramel loaded bar was aggressively marketed in the 1970s with commercials asking "What's a big, fat, chewy candy bar?"

GooGoo Cluster

800

This 1970s Wonka creation featured a hard, colorful candy stick meant to be dipped directly into packets of intensely sour, powdery sugar

Pixy Stix / Lik-M-Aid Fun Dip (Note: Specifically, the original un-chunked Pixy Stix style / Tart 'n' Tinys)

1000

This premium chocolate bar features a distinctly long, triangular shape meant to mirror the Swiss Alps

Toblerone

1000

This specialized, premium jelly bean brand features high-intensity, authentic flavors like Buttered Popcorn and Toasted Marshmallow

Jelly Belly

1000

These small, chalky, heart-shaped candies feature short romantic phrases pressed into them like "Be Mine" or "Kiss Me."

Conversation Hearts

1000

This unique, hard molasses candy wrapped in distinct orange and black wax paper has been a highly debated Halloween staple since 1914

Mary Janes

1000

This unique, retro chocolate bar from the 1970s featured three distinct, air-bubbled chocolate waves, each containing a different fruit-flavored cream

Sky Bar