Hot Wheels 2025 Peanuts Series

Hot Wheels 2025 Peanuts Series

In stores now is the 2025 Hot Wheels series that celebrates the 75th anniversary of the Peanuts comic strip. Check out these better pics of the 5-car set featuring Snoopy and other popular characters created by Charles M. Schulz.

  1. Volkswagen Beetle - Joe Cool
  2. 1985 Honda CR-X - Snoopy & Woodstock
  3. Super Gnat - Charlie Brown, Linus & Lucy
  4. Bully Goat - Peanuts Characters
  5. 60s Fiat 500D Modificado - Peppermint Patty & Marcie

Peanuts is a Silver series, a mid-tier line of Hot Wheels with added detail. It is part of the Themed Entertainment line of Hot Wheels which is assortment GDG83 and ships in 10-count cases.

In the U.S., assortment GDG83 can be found at Walmart.

Peanuts debuted on October 2, 1950, and ran for nearly 50 years, becoming one of the most popular comic strips of all time.

By the time Charles Schulz passed away in 2000, Peanuts was featured in over 2,600 newspapers, reaching approximately 355 million readers in 75 countries and translated into 21 languages.

Joe Cool is Snoopy’s alter ego in the Peanuts comic strip, where he dons sunglasses and leans against a wall, pretending to be a laid-back college student.

Snoopy is Charlie Brown’s imaginative beagle who is known for his vivid daydreams and alter egos like the World War I Flying Ace and Joe Cool.

Snoopy’s iconic red doghouse is larger on the inside, famously holding everything from a pool table to a Van Gogh painting.

Woodstock is Snoopy's quirky bird friend who first appeared in 1966 but did not have a name until 1970.

Charlie Brown was named after a fellow art school colleague of Charles M. Schulz, but his personality reflects many of Schulz's own traits.

Lucy Van Pelt is the bold and bossy character known for pulling the football away from Charlie Brown at the last second.

Linus van Pelt is the security-blanket-carrying best friend of Charlie Brown and the younger brother of Lucy.

The first Peanuts TV special, A Charlie Brown Christmas, aired in 1965 and was groundbreaking for featuring real music and thoughtful storylines.

Other TV specials include It's the Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown, A Charlie Brown Thanksgiving, Snoopy, Come Home, and many more.

Peanuts introduced iconic phrases like “good grief,” “security blanket,” and “blockhead” into everyday language.

Peanuts originated as Li'l Folks, a weekly panel cartoon that appeared in Schulz’s hometown newspaper, the St. Paul Pioneer Press, from 1947 to 1950.

Charles Schulz died the night before the final Peanuts strip was published on Sunday, February 13, 2000.