
My Hot Wheels Hunter has managed to drag me back into Target over the last 6 months for the first time since that unfortunate “statement” the retailer made back in the summer of 2023. Its probably a good thing, too, because since writing about the retro-cool reissues of “The Hot Ones” back in May, I’ve learned that these were exclusive to Target, just like the “Ultra Hots.” The Ultra Hots reissues were just OK; I could have lived without those. The Hot Ones are another story: these are really cool! Their recapture of that early ‘80s flair is so good that I can’t help myself. After 3 previous runs of “The Hot Ones” from 2011 to 2016, another batch has arrived for 2025! Better get to “Tarjhey!”

There’s something both comforting and vaguely unsettling about the way Mattel keeps resurrecting all their greatest hits from the last 50+ years. Comforting, because the familiar wheels and bold blister-card graphics ignite that old spark we felt as kids standing in a Kay-Bee aisle, hoping the peg contained a ’55 Chevy or a clean Mercedes 380SEL. Unsettling, because it reminds us that nostalgia has become a business model — and that we, the grown-up versions of those kids, are now the target demographic.

Back in May I wrote about the original Hot Ones and their less-beloved follow-up, the Ultra Hots — how those skinny axles and gold foil wheels actually lived up to the hype, and how the whole enterprise, cheesy commercials and all, captured a moment in time when Hot Wheels was genuinely trying to innovate. This new 2025 Target-exclusive run isn’t innovation; it’s resurrection. It’s Mattel looking at the demographic data and saying, “Ah yes… the ’80s kids are in their peak earning years.”


To be fair, there’s a lot to like. The graphics are clean and the paint looks more Spectraflame than some of the previous “neo-retro” attempts (the ‘70 Celica ST and the ‘81 Camaro are both legitimately gorgeous). And I’ll admit — seeing the Hot Ones logo again on a store peg does momentarily give me that old flicker of excitement. But it’s a different kind of thrill now. Back then, it was anticipation. Today, it’s recognition — a flash of memory from a world that no longer exists, cleverly packaged and sold back to us for $3.49 a pop.




What strikes me most is the way this mirrors our changing relationship with nostalgia itself. The first time Mattel revived “The Hot Ones” back in 2011, it felt novel — almost like an Easter egg for die-hard collectors. In 2025, it feels almost inevitable, like another turn of a wheel that’s been spinning for decades. We’re not wistful outsiders anymore; we’re the engine driving the cycle.



And the truth is, I’ll still buy them. I’ll stand there in the Target die-cast aisle, trying not to look like a middle-aged lunatic as I carefully check each peg for the BMW M1 Procar or the Celica. And I’ll bring them home and stare at them for a moment and think: Right — this is who I used to be. Then I’ll put them in the display case next to the originals… and wonder, not for the first time, whether nostalgia is keeping the past alive — or quietly replacing it.

Either way, if a little gold-foiled wheel and a splash of gleaming paint can make an ordinary Friday feel like 1981 again — well, that’s a kind of magic that both Jason and I are still willing to pay for! Mattel knows that, and I’m ok with it…so yeah, Hot Wheels corporate: keep ‘em coming!
These are some cool cars with really nice details. These little cars are more than just toys, they are an experience, and a far reaching one.