In its place, all Cracker Jack boxes will now include a piece of paper with a QR code printed on it. Scanning that code into an iOS or Android app called Blippar will cause a baseball-themed digital “toy” to appear on the screen. For instance, consumers might see themselves on a simulated stadium Jumbo-Tron, or be able to put themselves on a digital baseball card that they can trade with others.
Haston Lewis, Frito-Lay’s senior director of marketing, said in a press release that the digitized toy and accompanying package redesign embrace “a modernized, young-at-heart attitude while keeping that treasured feeling of childhood wistfulness.” (It also likely keeps costs down for the company.)
So far, the reaction from Cracker Jack fans has not been positive, with dozens of complaints flooding the recent posts on the snack’s Facebook page. “If they’re going to take away the prize, they might as well stop production altogether,” one person wrote. “That would be doing themselves and everyone else a favor instead of taking away a part of our childhood memories by taking away the toy.”
Why this matters: This isn’t the first time Cracker Jack has dabbled in digital toys. In 2013, Frito-Lay started offering codes to redeem games through the Cracker Jack app on iOS and Android. Meanwhile, Frito-Lay has cut back on the toy’s prominence, switching from plastic trinkets to paper slips with only riddles and jokes. Still, it sounds like this is the end of the line for physical toys as a whole, as phones and apps subsume another cultural touchstone.