TL;DR: Not every popular toy brand meets the standards we set for quality, play value, and developmental benefit. After 55 years of curating toys, we've learned that a smaller, carefully chosen selection serves families far better than stocking everything with a recognizable logo.
Walking into a big box store means facing walls of toys organized by brand, each one fighting for attention with flashy packaging and licensed characters. We could do that too. We choose not to—and it's one of the most important decisions we make as a store.
Every toy on our shelves at The Toy Chest earned its spot through a process that goes well beyond "Is this selling well nationally?" We evaluate play value, construction quality, developmental benefit, safety, and longevity. Some massive brands check one or two of those boxes. Very few check all of them.
That selection process is what makes walking into our Nashville, Indiana store feel different from scrolling a website with 40,000 options.
When we pass on a popular brand, it's rarely one dramatic reason. It's usually a combination of factors that add up.
The play runs out too fast. Some toys are designed around a single gimmick—press a button, watch a thing happen, repeat. Kids figure out the whole toy in fifteen minutes. We look for toys with what the industry calls "open-ended play value," meaning a child can use it differently at age four than they do at age six.
The construction doesn't hold up. Plastic that cracks after a few drops. Pieces that don't stay connected. Paint that chips into tiny flakes. We physically handle every toy we consider, and many popular items simply don't survive the kind of enthusiastic play they're going to get in a real home.
The brand prioritizes licensing over design. A character on the box doesn't make a toy better. Some licensed products are genuinely well-designed. Many are average toys marked up because of the face on the packaging. We'd rather carry the well-designed toy at a fair price, character or not.
Safety and material concerns. The U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission sets baseline requirements for toy safety, but our standards go further. We pay attention to material sourcing, small part durability, and how toys hold up after months of use—not just out of the box.
Without naming specific names, there's always one trendy brand each season that grandparents and parents ask us about. Spring 2026 is no exception.
Our answer is usually the same: "We looked at it. Here's what we found. And here's something we think does the same thing better."
That conversation is actually one of our favorite parts of the job. When someone asks why we don't carry a specific item, it gives us a chance to show them an alternative they didn't know existed. Nine times out of ten, the alternative is more engaging, better built, and sometimes even less expensive.
Independent toy stores like ours exist specifically to offer things you can't find in every Target aisle. If we stocked only the biggest brands, there'd be no reason to visit us at all.
Some of the best-made, most-loved toys in our store come from companies most people have never heard of. Small manufacturers who obsess over one product line instead of spreading thin across hundreds of SKUs.
These companies tend to:
We've built relationships with many of these makers over decades. They trust us to represent their work, and we trust them to keep quality high. That mutual accountability doesn't exist with a mega-brand shipping millions of units to thousands of retailers.
Our curated approach changes the shopping experience in a practical way. Instead of comparing forty building sets and hoping you pick a good one, you're choosing between five or six—each one already vetted for quality and play value.
That's especially useful for gift-givers who don't live with the child daily. Grandparents visiting Nashville for the weekend, aunts picking up a birthday present between Brown County hikes—they don't have time to research every option. They need a store where everything on the shelf is already a solid choice.
Our staff can then narrow it further based on the child's age, interests, and what they already own. That's a ten-minute conversation that replaces hours of online comparison shopping.
The toys we don't carry tell you as much about us as the ones we do. Each gap represents a brand or product that didn't meet our standards—and space we kept open for something that does.
After 55 years, we'd rather be the store where every purchase feels like a win than the store where you have to hope you grabbed the right one.
Toy Company
The Toy Chest has been a trusted independent toy store for 55 years—with decades of experience helping families find the perfect toys.
Nashville, Indiana
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