You’re probably here because you saw a Beerus Funko Pop in one of three places. On a shelf at a shop. In a seller photo that looked almost too good. Or in another collector’s display, where that long-eared purple destroyer somehow stole attention from every Super Saiyan around him.
That reaction makes sense. Beerus has one of those designs that lands instantly in Funko form. The angular ears, the Egyptian-inspired collar, the calm face that says “I could erase this planet, but I’d rather nap first.” Even people who only casually follow Dragon Ball tend to stop and ask, “Which version is that?”
That’s where collecting gets interesting. A beerus funko pop isn’t just one figure. It’s a small collecting lane with common releases, exclusive finishes, and a few variants that behave very differently once you look at scarcity, materials, and resale demand. If you’ve ever browsed pop culture art prints for display inspiration, you already know that presentation changes how people experience a character. The same is true here. A standard Beerus and a convention metallic Beerus may share the same god of destruction, but collectors read them as very different artifacts.
Welcome to the World of the Beerus Funko Pop
A new collector usually starts with a simple question. “Why does this one cost a little, while that one costs a lot?” With Beerus, that question shows up fast because the character has both an easy entry point and some much more desirable variants.
One friend of mine started with the standard Beerus because he liked the character. No strategy, no spreadsheets, no hunt. Then he saw a metallic version with convention branding and realized he wasn’t looking at “the same Pop in shiny paint.” He was looking at a different tier of collectibility.
That’s the key idea. Not all Beerus Pops carry the same collecting story. Some are meant to be widely enjoyed. Others feel more like Dragon Ball’s rare training artifacts. Same universe, very different chase.
Practical rule: Don’t judge a Beerus Pop only by the sculpt. Judge it by release type, finish, condition, and how hard it was to get when it first appeared.
Beerus is a perfect teacher for this hobby because his lineup shows several major Funko rules in one place. Common releases teach accessibility. Metallic and chrome finishes teach visual appeal. Flocked variants teach how texture changes demand. Convention exclusives teach scarcity better than any forum argument ever will.
If you’re brand new, don’t worry about memorizing every box number on day one. Start by learning why collectors care. Once that clicks, the shelves make a lot more sense.
Who Is Beerus the God of Destruction
Beerus matters because he changed the temperature of Dragon Ball the moment he arrived. Before him, strength in the series often felt like a staircase. Climb hard enough, train long enough, gain one more form, and maybe you’re on top.
Beerus walked in and made that ladder look tiny.
He isn’t just powerful. He’s powerful in a relaxed, almost amused way. That contrast is why fans remember him. He can be lazy, picky, funny, and terrifying in the same stretch of screen time. That’s a rare combination, and it gives his merch a lot of personality.
Why his design works so well as a Pop
Some anime characters lose detail when Funko simplifies them. Beerus doesn’t. His silhouette does the heavy lifting.
You can spot him from across a room because of a few features:
- Tall ears: They create an unmistakable outline even in a crowded Dragon Ball display.
- Lean frame: Beerus looks different from bulkier fighters, which helps him stand out among Goku, Vegeta, and Broly figures.
- Regal outfit: The collar, arm bands, and diamond patterns translate cleanly into vinyl form.
- Controlled expression: A Beerus Pop doesn’t need a screaming battle face to feel accurate.
That last part matters. Beerus is menacing because he’s calm. A good figure captures restraint, not just force.
Why fans keep collecting him
Collectors don’t just buy Beerus because he’s strong. They buy him because he represents a shift in the franchise. He expanded the scale of Dragon Ball while still feeling weirdly personal. He’ll threaten worlds, then argue over food like a cat who knows he owns the house.
That mix gives Funko plenty to play with. Metallic finishes suit his divine aura. Flocked textures lean into the feline qualities. Chrome variants amplify the surreal, god-tier feel. In other words, the character himself explains why so many Beerus variants exist.
A Collector's Guide to Beerus Pop Variants
A Beerus collection can look simple at first glance. Then you notice that one version feels like a clean roster staple, another carries convention prestige, and another changes the figure through texture alone. That is the part many list-style guides skip. The question is not just which Beerus Pops exist. It is why collectors treat them differently.

A good way to read the lineup is to separate sculpt, finish, and release story. Sculpt tells you what the figure is. Finish changes how it feels on a shelf. Release story shapes demand, because collectors often chase the version with the strongest origin story as much as the one with the best look. That pattern shows up across fandoms, not just Dragon Ball. You can see the same collector mindset in other categories, including vintage Star Wars collectibles that gain appeal through rarity, condition, and release history.
The standard Beerus number 120
This is the foundation piece.
The common #120 usually makes the most sense for a fan who wants Beerus represented without turning the purchase into a hunt. It delivers the core character in Funko form and gives you a useful baseline for comparing every other variant. Seasoned collectors often start here because a standard release teaches your eye what is changing from version to version.
That matters more than it sounds. If you have only seen promo photos, a metallic or chrome release can feel like a completely different figure. In hand, the sculpt is often familiar. The finish and sticker are what shift the collecting appeal.
The metallic SDCC Beerus number 120
The SDCC metallic version works like Beerus entering the room with godly aura already active. The pose is recognizable, but the presentation tells collectors this is not the everyday release.
Two forces are at work here. The metallic finish gives the figure a ceremonial, premium look that fits a divine character. The SDCC connection adds event exclusivity, which creates a memory around the item. For long-term collectors, that second part often matters just as much. A convention exclusive is not only a figure. It is a figure with a built-in story about where it came from, who had access to it, and how hard it was to secure at release.
That is why exclusives can separate from commons over time even when the mold itself is similar. Collectors are not only buying plastic and paint. They are buying scarcity, timing, and bragging rights.
The Beerus number 514 finish variants
#514 is where newer collectors often start to understand finishes in a practical way. These versions show how surface treatment can change the personality of the same character.
Flocked Beerus adds a soft texture that fits his cat-like design. It feels playful, but it also feels character-accurate. Purple Chrome goes in the opposite direction. It swaps texture for reflection and turns Beerus into more of a display piece, especially under shelf lighting. Neither approach is better in every collection. They serve different collector goals.
One rewards touch and novelty. The other rewards visual impact.
What flocked, chrome, and metallic really mean for collectors
Collectors sometimes talk about finishes as if they are just cosmetic upgrades. In practice, each finish attracts a different kind of buyer.
- Flocked: Best for collectors who want the figure to express Beerus's feline side. The added texture gives the Pop more personality and makes it stand apart from standard vinyl at a glance.
- Purple Chrome: Best for display-first collectors. Reflections catch light fast, so this version tends to pop in photos and in lit cases.
- Metallic: Best for collectors who want something premium-looking without the mirror-like intensity of chrome. It often feels closer to a special edition than a novelty piece.
If you are building with the long view, choose the variant that matches the role you want Beerus to play in your collection. The common #120 is your base form. The SDCC metallic is the status piece. The #514 finish variants are where shelf style and collector taste really start to show.
Understanding the Value of Your Beerus Pop
You spot two Beerus Pops on the aftermarket. Both show the same God of Destruction grin. One sells like a solid starter piece. The other draws bids like someone just announced a tournament at the World Martial Arts stage.
That gap is the heart of value.

A Beerus Pop is not priced only by character popularity. Collectors also weigh release story, finish, condition, and how easy that version is to replace later. That is why a standard shelf pickup and a convention exclusive can feel like they belong to different power levels, even when the sculpt starts from the same base.
The biggest drivers of value
Three factors shape the market more than anything else.
- Scarcity: A wide retail release usually has a lower ceiling than a convention or store exclusive with a narrower supply.
- Condition: Box wear, sticker damage, sun fading, and missing packaging all change what buyers are willing to pay.
- Release identity: Collectors respond to a version with a clear reason to exist. An event exclusive, a finish that suits the character, or a short-lived release window gives a Pop a stronger story.
The Beerus [2016 SDCC] #120 Metallic is a good example of how those forces stack together. It is not just "Beerus, but shinier." It combines a known event tie-in with a premium-looking finish on a character who already has a strong fan base. That combination gives it staying power in a way many random variants never get.
A quick comparison that makes the market easier to read
| Variant | Pop # | Key Feature | Release Type | Value Tendency |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Standard Beerus | 120 | Common non-metallic | Common release | Entry point, easier to replace |
| Beerus Metallic SDCC | 120 | Metallic finish | SDCC exclusive | Strong collector demand |
| Beerus Flocked | 514 | Flocked texture | Funimation exclusive | Appeals to finish-focused buyers |
Experienced collectors read that table almost like Dragon Ball power scaling. The common #120 is the base form. Exclusive finishes are where rarity, presentation, and collector memory start multiplying each other.
Reading value like a long-term collector
Short-term buyers often chase whatever looks hottest in photos. Long-term collectors ask a better question. Why would someone still want this exact version years from now?
That shift matters.
A finish alone does not guarantee demand. Chrome can look striking and still feel gimmicky if it does not fit the character. Flocked Beerus makes more sense because Beerus is cat-like by design, so the finish supports the character instead of fighting him. Metallic often lands in the middle. It adds presence without turning the figure into a mirror.
Release context matters too. Collectors across categories have seen this for years, from convention Funko drops to vintage Star Wars collectibles. The item matters, but the story behind the item often decides whether it stays a casual pickup or becomes a piece people keep hunting for.
Collector mindset: Buy the Beerus version whose scarcity and design choices you understand. That is a stronger bet than buying the one that simply grabs attention in a single listing photo.
How to Spot a Fake Beerus Funko Pop
You find a Beerus listing late at night. The price looks good, the sticker looks almost right, and the seller says it is "100% authentic." That is the exact moment to slow your pulse and inspect like Whis watching a training session.

Beerus fakes show up for a simple reason. Variants with stronger collector demand give counterfeit sellers more incentive to copy the box, the finish, or the convention sticker. That matters even if you are not chasing the rarest version. A fake common can still cost you money, and a fake exclusive can damage your confidence as a collector for a long time.
Start with the box. Packaging is the scouter reading that gives away the problem before the figure ever leaves the tray. Authentic Funko boxes usually look consistent, while counterfeits often feel close but slightly off in several small ways at once.
- Print sharpness: Real boxes tend to have crisp outlines and balanced color. Fake boxes often look blurry, too dark, or oddly glossy.
- Fonts and spacing: Check the POP! logo, the "Animation" banner, the character name, and the figure number. Counterfeits often miss the exact font weight or spacing, especially in small text.
- Bottom panel details: Look at the barcode, legal text, country of manufacture, and date formatting. Sloppy alignment or muddy printing is a warning sign.
- Window quality: Clear plastic should sit neatly in the box. Warped windows, rough glue marks, or crooked assembly deserve a second look.
- Exclusive stickers: Many buyers focus here first, and counterfeiters know it. Compare sticker size, color, finish, and placement with verified photos from trusted sellers.
Then inspect Beerus himself. A fake often loses the character's sharp attitude in the sculpt. Ears can look too soft, paint lines around the eyes can drift, and the costume details may lack the clean edges you expect from an authentic release.
- Paint edges: The eyes, blue and black outfit sections, collar details, and armbands should look controlled. Bleeding paint or uneven color blocks usually point to a lower-quality copy.
- Sculpt crispness: Beerus has a lean design with pointed features. Soft ears, mushy facial lines, or vague jewelry details are common counterfeit tells.
- Material feel: Authentic vinyl usually feels even in texture and finish. Fakes can feel too light, chalky, sticky, or oddly brittle.
- Foot and head markings: Turn the figure over and inspect any molded or printed marks. Missing text, misspellings, or poor molding quality deserve caution.
One clue rarely settles it. Three or four small issues together often do.
This matters more with finish variants, because counterfeiters copy the version that collectors already see as more desirable. Metallic paint that looks flat or overly sparkly can be a red flag. Flocked texture that sits unevenly or covers the wrong areas should also make you pause. The finish should match the character and the release, not look like someone added a power-up after the fact.
This walkthrough helps train your eye before you buy:
If you collect across categories, the habit is the same. Compare known authentic examples, check seller history, and let details stack up before you commit. That careful approach helps with Pops just as much as it does with other licensed collectibles, including spotting odd details in Haunted Mansion pins.
Smart Buying Strategies for Your Collection
You are standing at a booth, holding a Beerus Pop that looks good from three feet away. The price feels fair. The sticker looks exciting. Then the actual collector question kicks in. Why this one, at this price, for your collection?
That question separates buying from collecting.
The smartest Beerus purchase starts with your goal, because each version plays a different role in the market. A standard release usually gives you character appeal at a lower entry point. An exclusive often carries extra demand because of sticker recognition, lower distribution, or a finish collectors chase. Metallic, flocked, and chrome variants are not just cosmetic swaps. They attract different buyers, and that affects how easy they are to find, compare, and resell later.
A lot of collectors drift into a mixed strategy without noticing. They want a clean shelf piece, but they spend like they are building an investment-focused lineup. Or they chase every variant, then realize half the fun budget went to purchases they do not care about long term. Beerus deserves a clearer plan than that. In Dragon Ball terms, you want Ultra Instinct judgment, not a panic buy powered by impulse.
Three collector paths that actually make sense
The entry collector route works well if you want Beerus represented on the shelf without paying an exclusive premium. Start with the standard release, learn the sculpt, study the box details, and get familiar with how authentic copies look in person. That baseline helps later if you decide to chase rarer versions.
The variant hunter route fits collectors who enjoy the differences between releases as much as the character itself. Metallic and flocked Beerus Pops can create very different kinds of demand. Metallic often appeals to fans who want a flashier display piece. Flocked tends to attract finish-focused collectors because texture changes how the figure reads on the shelf. Picking one lane first keeps your spending controlled and your collection more intentional.
The long-term selective collector buys fewer pieces and cares more about story than quantity. Convention ties, retailer exclusivity, condition, and sticker type matter more here than filling every gap fast. This path works like training with Whis. Slow, disciplined choices usually beat rushing in with raw energy.
Buying online without getting burned
Online listings reward patience. A seller’s first photo is marketing. Your job is verification.
Ask for front, back, bottom, sticker close-ups, and one clear photo from the side of the box window. Those angles help you judge condition, confirm release details, and catch signs of box swapping. If the seller hesitates, that tells you something too.
Use this checklist before paying:
- Ask for box corners: Creases and dents often sit just outside the main listing photo.
- Request a clear sticker photo: For exclusives, the sticker is part of the collectible story and part of the value conversation.
- Check whether all photos match: Different lighting is normal. Different surfaces, shadows, or box wear patterns can mean the images are not all from the same item.
- Read the description twice: Words like “as is,” “minor wear,” or “see photos” can hide damage that matters once the Pop arrives.
Buy exclusives with the same caution you would use inspecting a Dragon Ball relic. Small details decide whether the piece holds its value.
Local shops and conventions offer a different advantage. You can compare several Beerus Pops side by side and start noticing how finish, sticker, and box condition change buyer interest. That is the part many list-style guides skip. Collectibility is not only about rarity. It is about how rarity, presentation, and buyer demand meet at the same time.
Condition discipline matters after the purchase too. A collector who stores boxes carelessly can erase the advantage of buying a strong copy in the first place. The same habit collectors use when protecting delicate media from wear and storage damage applies here. Good care supports future value.
One last rule helps almost every Beerus collector. If a deal feels rushed, let it pass. Another standard release will show up. Even many exclusives return to the market. The hard part is not finding a Beerus Pop. The hard part is choosing the one that still makes sense for your shelf six months from now.
Display and Care for Your Divine Destroyer
A good Beerus display should feel controlled, not cluttered. He’s a god of destruction, but his design has elegance. Let that shape how you present him.

How to keep the figure looking sharp
For boxed Pops, keep them away from direct sunlight and unstable humidity. UV exposure can fade packaging, and shelf heat can age plastic windows. For unboxed figures, dust with a soft dry brush rather than anything damp or abrasive.
If you own a flocked Beerus, be even gentler. Texture can trap dust more easily, and aggressive cleaning can flatten the finish.
Display choices that suit Beerus
Beerus works well with negative space. He doesn’t need a crowded wall of figures pressing into him from every angle. A riser, acrylic case, or themed Dragon Ball shelf gives the sculpt room to breathe.
These habits help:
- Use protectors for boxed items: They reduce scuffs and shelf wear.
- Avoid window-side placement: Light is great for photos, bad for long-term packaging health.
- Separate heavy items: Don’t let larger collectibles lean against Pop boxes.
- Clean the shelf itself often: A clean base keeps the figure cleaner too.
Collectors who already care for media displays will recognize the same preservation mindset from guides on how to care for vinyl records. Different collectible, same principle. Respect the material, and it lasts longer.
Frequently Asked Questions for Beerus Collectors
Are Beerus Funko Pops bobble-heads
Many Dragon Ball Funko figures are produced in the stylized Pop format associated with Funko’s vinyl line, and collectors often use “bobble-head” casually for Pops in general. If you’re shopping, rely on the actual product photos and listing details rather than assuming every figure behaves the same physically.
What does vaulted mean for a beerus funko pop
“Vaulted” usually means Funko is no longer actively producing that item. Collectors often treat vaulted status as a sign that supply is no longer being refreshed, but vaulted alone doesn’t guarantee high value. Demand still has to be there.
Should I keep Beerus in the box
If value and condition matter most to you, boxed display is the safer play. If your goal is shelf personality and you bought a standard release to enjoy, out-of-box display can be completely reasonable. Match the choice to the purpose of the item.
Is one Beerus enough for a collection
For some collectors, yes. A single Beerus can anchor a Dragon Ball shelf beautifully. For variant-focused collectors, one often turns into a small mission because the finishes tell different stories.
If you're ready to add more character to your shelf beyond a beerus funko pop, POPvault is a great place to explore official pop culture art, décor, apparel, and collectible-friendly finds that help your display feel like a complete world, not just a row of boxes.