
This Creeper™ yo-yo has a real spider incased in transparent acrylic. The bugs are authentic and no two are exactly alike. All of our spiders are sustainably farm raised and look like they are still alive! Scare your family and friends while impressing them with your yo-yo skills.

Some yo-yos have 100 percent cotton strings. The cotton may slow down the yo-yo, chafe your fingers and it's more likely to break from impact if you're throwing really hard. They will also not last as long.
Another option is 100 percent polyester which is much more durable however; the polyester may actually melt during certain tricks.
The Creeper offers a string blend – 50/50 poly/cotton. Each string features increased durability, material blend to protect your hand and make for fast play.

Since today’s bearing system yo-yos allow for spinning speed you need a response system - something on the yo-yo that's actually going to physically grab the string and pull it up to you. The first kind of response system developed is called a friction starburst. It is molded into the inner sides of the yo-yo around the bearing set well and looks like a starburst around the bearing. When pulling up on the yo-yo these starburst ridges allow the string to catch for a great return.

Mix-up your look? Customize your play? Maintain your yo-yo? All of these would be impossible without a yo-yo that can be unscrewed at the axle.
The very first type of yo-yo was a fixed-axle. This is what most of your grandfathers have played with. When they say “it's not like the yo-yo I used to use”, they are right. It has no bearings and will not come apart.
Mix and match your bugs, trade with friends and collect them all!

Spiders are the largest order of arachnids and rank seventh in total species diversity among all other groups of organisms.
Spiders have no extensor muscles in their limbs and instead extend them by hydraulic pressure. Spiders can generate pressures up to eight times their resting level to extend their legs, and jumping spiders can jump up to 50 times their own length by suddenly increasing the blood pressure in the third or fourth pair of legs!
Most spiders have four pairs of eyes on the top-front area of their head, arranged in patterns that vary from one family to another.