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CompanyYo-yo BrandEst. 1994–2014

SuperYo

SuperYo was founded in 1994 by Arne Dixon, a former Duncan yo-yo demonstrator who had spent years performing and teaching at schools across the United States. Based in Lynnwood, Washington, the company was notable for owning its entire manufacturing process end-to-end, including all machinery — a rarity among small toy manufacturers of the era. SuperYo initially produced all its yo-yos domestically in the USA, later outsourcing portions of production to Chinese factories as the boom years wound down.

The company’s product philosophy was engineering-forward. Several SuperYo models introduced genuinely novel mechanisms: the patented IntelliGap axle system allowed string gap adjustment by twisting the halves without losing small parts; the Typhoon introduced the first plastic ball bearing in a production yo-yo; and the Samurai featured one of the first ceramic bearings in any production yo-yo, along with diamond-finish CNC-machined aluminum halves toleranced to ±0.0005″.

SuperYo was deeply embedded in the late 1990s yo-yo performance and competition circuit. In 1999, Arne Dixon produced “Kickin’ Tricks,” a landmark instructional video featuring Doctor Popular, Jennifer Baybrook, David Capurro, and Steve Brown, shot on location at the 1999 American Nationals and the 1999 World Yo-Yo Contest. The Samurai held a documented sleep record of twelve minutes and two seconds at time of release.

From the early 2000s onward, SuperYo became closely tied to The NED Show — Dixon’s educational character-building assembly program for K–6 schools. The NED acronym (Never give up, Encourage others, Do your best) became the company’s primary identity. The yo-yo brand faded as NED Show yo-yos became the main product output, with production appearing to wind down entirely by the mid-2010s.

Products

Product
Type
Material
Style
Year
  1. 3149

    Cruiser

    Yo-yo
    Plastic
    1A
    1994
  2. 3148

    Triple Play

    Yo-yo
    Plastic
    1A · 2A
    1994
  3. 3147

    Boomerang

    Yo-yo
    Plastic
    2A
    1996
  4. 3146

    Sonic Spin

    Yo-yo
    Plastic
    1A
    1996
  5. 3145

    Spinboss

    Yo-yo
    Plastic
    1A · 2A
    1997
  6. 3144

    Renegade

    Yo-yo
    Plastic
    1A · 2A
    1997
  7. 3138

    Invader

    Yo-yo
    Plastic
    1A · 2A
    1999
  8. 3139

    Nitro

    Yo-yo
    Plastic
    1A
    1999
  9. 3140

    Typhoon

    Yo-yo
    Plastic
    1A
    1999
  10. 3141

    Samurai

    Yo-yo
    Aluminum
    1A
    1999
  11. 3142

    Turbo Tread

    Yo-yo
    Plastic
    1A · 2A
    1999
  12. 3143

    Wildcat

    Yo-yo
    Plastic
    1A · 2A
    1999
  13. 3125

    Cosmic Spin

    Yo-yo
    Plastic
    1A · 2A
    2014