You know it is there before you reach it.
The Sad Nuggie Adoption Centre sits on the lower level of CF Toronto Eaton Centre between MINISO Pink and The Canadian Naturalist, a few doors down from Shoppers Drug Mart. The mall’s own wayfinding kiosks are already directing shoppers there by name, 89 metres from the Queen Street entrance, one minute on foot. On paper that sounds like a quiet stretch of mall. In practice, the storefront wraps the entire facade in the brand’s signature print, golden nugget characters scattered across pale blue, with the Toronto skyline mural visible straight through the glass from the corridor. The CN Tower. The Rogers Centre. Nuggies navigating the city by streetcar and kayak. A giant Nuggie sits at the entrance in front of a living green wall. Shoppers who have never heard of the brand are stopping before they have decided to go in, phones already out.
The pop-up opened May 1st in the unit most recently occupied by Urban Customz, and for anyone who has followed the brand’s journey from a fulfilment warehouse in Strathroy to CF Masonville Place to Canada’s busiest mall, the address feels both inevitable and earned. Co-founder Ryan Thompson’s reaction when the CF leasing team reached out captures it well. “I said: I do not need any other information. I do not care what it costs. We are doing this.”


Inside, the first thing that stops you is the trees. Two full-canopy specimens rise from raised grass platforms running down the centre of the floor, Nuggies clustered at the base and tucked into the branches above. It is not a design choice you would expect in a mall pop-up, and that is exactly why it works. The platforms break the sightline to the back wall, forcing you to move around them and spend more time in the space than you planned. The Nuggies in the branches have been photographed constantly since opening. Every photo is reach the brand did not pay for.
The walls on either side run the full length of the store, each section anchored by warm wood shelving and a digital screen displaying the full biography of that section’s character. Cow Nuggie from Scotland, a Taurus born May 2nd, whose favourite is chocolate milk, who feels udderly lost wandering through lonely pastures. Panda Nuggie from China, a Libra, too soft for this world. Raccoon Nuggie from Canada, a Virgo, whose life motto is that it is a dumpster fire. Penguin Nuggie from Antarctica, a Capricorn, who would cross any frozen desert for a true friend. Each profile sits above the plushies and apparel for that character, and the effect is that the selection process happens organically. You read, you find the one that feels like yours, and you have already made the decision before a staff member says a word.
@shopsadnuggie Directions to our new adoption centre in The Eaton Centre! there's alot of coffee on the way.. #sadnuggie #sadnuggiesadoptioncentre #mentalhealth #toronto #thingstodo ♬ original sound – Sad Nuggie Ltd
This is the adoption model that turned a weekend warehouse opening in Strathroy into a 10,000-person event in under three weeks, and that has since matched tens of thousands of Nuggies with their forever homes across the country. Thompson and Carter built the brand around the idea that every Nuggie belongs entirely to the person who takes it home, reflecting who they are rather than functioning as a fixed character. “Instead of making every plushie the same fixed character, the way Mickey Mouse is always Mickey Mouse, we said these are all their own entity,” Thompson has said. “They become whatever the person who adopts them needs them to be.” The screens make that philosophy visible the moment you walk in.


The product range runs from five dollars for stickers, notepads, and buttons, labelled throughout the store as Appetizers, up to forty dollars for the core plushie range and fifty and above for Vault Edition characters. Devil Nuggie, deep fried in the underworld according to the brand’s lore, has a pattern unique to every individual unit and comes with a removable magnetic pitchfork. Once the Vault Edition is fully adopted it does not return. The Christmas blind box series is also available, with mini variants including a Snowman, Reindeer, and Narwhal. Toward the back of the store, a section called Sad Nuggie’s Closet carries the full apparel line including pyjama sets, graphic tees, and hoodies, alongside dressed Nuggie variants in a backlit display case.
On one wall, mounted across the pale blue surface in a scattered, asymmetric pattern, is an installation of chrome deep fryer baskets. No product. No signage. Just the baskets and the shadows they cast in the store lighting. In the brand’s mythology, every Nuggie is crafted by top-tier Nuggie chefs and perfectly crisped in world-class air fryers. The wall takes that internal logic and makes it part of the physical environment, which is harder to pull off than it looks and the kind of detail that separates a retail experience from a retail space.


Every adoption leaves the store with a full package: health card, health report, holographic collector card, take-out tray, stickers, and an adoption certificate and pledge card. After that, owners can access the brand’s online health portal to check records, book appointments, and consult with specialists. It is a post-purchase engagement tool that keeps the brand present long after the visit.
The far wall carries a custom illustrated map of Toronto, the CN Tower and Rogers Centre rendered in the brand’s blue-and-white style, with Nuggies moving through the city in every direction. It is a small thing that matters. Most pop-ups at this mall are built to be identical in every market. This one was made for here.
The Sad Nuggie Adoption Centre is open during regular Eaton Centre hours. Entry is free.
For the full story on how Sad Nuggie went from a $6,000 bet in Strathroy to CF Toronto Eaton Centre, read our feature here.

More Photos from the CF Toronto Eaton Centre Adoption Centre











Dustin Fuhs is the founder and Editor-in-Chief of 6ix Retail, Toronto’s premier source for retail and hospitality industry news. As the former Editor-in-Chief of Retail Insider, Canada’s most-read retail trade publication, Dustin brings over two decades of expertise spanning retail, marketing, entertainment and hospitality sectors. His experience includes roles with industry giants such as The Walt Disney Company, The Hockey Hall of Fame, The Canadian Opera Company, Starbucks Canada and Blockbuster.
Recognized as a RETHINK Retail Top Retail Expert in 2024, 2025 and 2026, Dustin delivers insider perspectives on Toronto’s evolving retail landscape, from emerging brands to established players reshaping the city’s commercial districts.
