• Percival Lugue, who has the Guinness World Record for the largest fast-food toy collection, poses with his display. Reuters
    Percival Lugue, who has the Guinness World Record for the largest fast-food toy collection, poses with his display. Reuters
  • Percival Lugue lives in Apalit in the Philippines. Reuters
    Percival Lugue lives in Apalit in the Philippines. Reuters
  • The graphic artist has an estimated 20,000 toys in his collection. Reuters
    The graphic artist has an estimated 20,000 toys in his collection. Reuters
  • Shelves filled with toys are pictured in the home of Percival Lugue. Reuters
    Shelves filled with toys are pictured in the home of Percival Lugue. Reuters
  • Percival Lugue hopes to turn his collection into a publicly viewable showcase one day. Reuters
    Percival Lugue hopes to turn his collection into a publicly viewable showcase one day. Reuters

Super-sized display: Filipino artist amasses collection of 20,000 fast-food restaurant toys


  • English
  • Arabic

Ever since the age of 5, Filipino graphic artist Percival Lugue has had a passion for collecting toys from fast-food restaurant chains such as McDonald's, Burger King and home-country favourite Jollibee.

Now, nearly five decades later, the collector has about 20,000 toys packed from floor to ceiling in his home and holds a Guinness World Record from 2014, when his collection reached more than 10,000 items.

"The toy is like a storyteller in itself," says Lugue, 50, explaining his hobby while sitting among an eclectic mix of toys in his three-storey home.

"For example, it gives me a glimpse of that particular period when I got it, the story of what's going on."

Lugue, who lives in Apalit in Pampanga, a province north-west of Manila, built his home especially to house his collection.

He likens the excitement of getting new toys to Christmas morning.

He has always played with the toys, but even as a child took good care of them and put them on display "unlike the other kids, who would tear up their toys into smithereens".

While most of his toys were obtained through personal purchases, some were donated by friends and family.

"I would invite my friends to have lunch at McDonald's ... and in one sitting I would be able to complete the whole set," he said.

One of his most treasured pieces is a Hetty Spaghetti figurine, a mascot from the Jollibee chain that his mother gave him in 1988.

His dream is to eventually put his collection on display for the public or even open a museum to "give others a chance to revisit their own childhood memories".