3 minute read

Monthly subscription boxes had their moment around 2016 — everyone and their dog launched one, most were terrible, and the biggest name in the space (Loot Crate) literally went bankrupt. Twice.

But the concept isn’t dead. For collectors who enjoy the surprise element and don’t mind building an eclectic collection across franchises, a well-curated box can genuinely save money compared to buying individual items at retail.

Geek Crate has been quietly delivering monthly boxes from the UK since 2014 — surviving while bigger competitors imploded. I subscribed for three months to see if it’s actually worth it in 2026.

What Is Geek Crate?

A monthly subscription box (£21.99/month + free UK shipping, £4.99 to EU) containing 4-7 items themed around pop culture, gaming, anime, comics, and movies. Each month has a different theme announced on their Instagram a few days before shipping.

Subscription options:

  • Monthly: £21.99/month
  • 3 months prepaid: £20.99/month (save £3 total)
  • 6 months prepaid: £19.99/month (save £12 total)
  • 12 months prepaid: £18.99/month (save £36 total)

What Arrived: Three Months of Boxes

Month 1: “Retro Revival” Theme

  • Exclusive Pac-Man graphic t-shirt (good quality, 180gsm cotton)
  • Sonic the Hedgehog enamel pin set (3 pins)
  • Tetris-themed ceramic mug
  • Retro gaming sticker sheet
  • Space Invaders keychain bottle opener
  • Mini art print (Donkey Kong)

Estimated retail value: ~£48

Month 2: “Dark Fantasy” Theme

  • The Witcher graphic t-shirt (different blank brand, slightly thinner)
  • Castlevania vinyl figure (~10cm, decent detail)
  • Dark Souls enamel pin
  • Fantasy art poster (A4)
  • Dragon-themed dice set (7 polyhedral)
  • Leather-look bookmark

Estimated retail value: ~£55

Month 3: “Mecha & Manga” Theme

  • Evangelion Unit-01 graphic t-shirt (back to the heavier cotton)
  • Gundam SD blind box figure
  • Attack on Titan acrylic standee
  • Anime sticker pack
  • Japanese snack (matcha Kit Kat pack)
  • Mechanical pencil with manga art

Estimated retail value: ~£44

Quality Assessment

T-shirts (the main value driver): Two out of three were genuinely nice — properly heavyweight cotton, good print quality, designs I’d actually wear. The third was noticeably thinner fabric. All survived multiple washes without cracking or fading.

Figures and collectibles: The Castlevania vinyl was the standout — good paint application, solid weight. The Gundam blind box was a basic SD figure, nothing special. Quality varies by licensing deal.

Filler items: Every box has 2-3 items that feel like padding — stickers, keychains, bookmarks. They’re fine for what they are, but they’re not why you subscribe.

Who Should Subscribe

Good fit if you:

  • Wear graphic t-shirts regularly
  • Enjoy multiple franchises (not just one)
  • Like the surprise/unboxing element
  • Are in the UK or EU (fast shipping, no customs)
  • Want to discover new series through merch

Bad fit if you:

  • Only collect one specific franchise
  • Are very particular about display-quality figures
  • Don’t wear graphic tees
  • Hate accumulating small items (pins, stickers)
  • Are outside Europe (shipping costs add up)

Geek Crate vs Alternatives

Feature Geek Crate Loot Crate Zavvi ZBox
Price/month £21.99 $29.99 (~£24) £24.99
Items per box 4-7 4-6 4-5
T-shirt included Always Most months Sometimes
Ships from UK USA UK
EU shipping £4.99 $15+ customs risk £5.99
Reliability Consistent since 2014 Rocky post-bankruptcy Consistent
Theme diversity Wide (gaming/anime/comics) Pop culture heavy Movie/TV focused

The Verdict

At £21.99/month, Geek Crate delivers roughly £45-55 of retail value. The t-shirt alone justifies about 70% of the cost if you’d buy one anyway. The remaining items are a mix — one or two genuinely nice pieces and some filler.

After three months, my honest split: I kept and use about 60% of what arrived. The other 40% went to friends, charity shop, or the “miscellaneous drawer.” That’s actually a better hit rate than Loot Crate ever managed.

If you enjoy the surprise factor and wear the shirts, it’s worth it. If you’re a serious collector who only wants specific high-quality pieces, spend that £22/month on exactly what you want instead.

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