
The best friend. Not the chosen one. Not the brightest wizard of his age. The one who showed up anyway, every single time, which turns out to matter more than either of those things.
Ronald Bilius Weasley has been underestimated for as long as he can remember — the sixth of seven children, the one with the hand-me-down robes and the corned beef sandwiches and the second-hand wand that backfired more reliably than it performed. Growing up in the shadow of brothers who were prefects and Quidditch captains and dragon handlers and the most famous twins in Gryffindor history is not, it turns out, straightforwardly good for the self-esteem. Ron knows this. He carries it. And then he climbs into a flying car, descends on a giant spider-infested forest, sacrifices himself on a chess board the size of a room, and does it all again the next year without being asked twice.
What makes Ron Weasley essential to the Harry Potter series is precisely what makes him easy to take for granted: he is the human one. Not blessed with Harry's destiny or Hermione's exceptional ability, but possessed of courage, loyalty, humour and the specific kind of steadiness that keeps people going when destiny and exceptional ability are having a complicated moment. He is every reader who ever worried they weren't enough, and then did the right thing anyway. The chess scene alone should have settled the argument. It didn't. The fandom continues. Ron continues not caring, which is very him.
Our Ron Weasley collection brings together officially licensed figures, accessories, homeware and gifts celebrating Gryffindor's most loyal Keeper — from Funko Pops and collector's pieces to mugs, prints and keepsakes for fans who have always known Ron Weasley was exactly where he was supposed to be.
King. Unambiguously.































