in the UK. From the first issue, readers have received free gifts from
The Beano: toy masks, sweets, posters, and toys. Originally, free gifts would be attached inside the cover or strategically on the front so that it could distract the buyer from other comics next to
The Beano on the shelves, hopefully excited for the next issue after reading it and eating/playing with the toys. Gifts were intentionally sporadic, especially during the Christmas period when families' money would be saved for food and presents. Issue 90 would be the last issue with a gift (
licorice "black eye") due to
rationing, the next free gift being the Flying Snorter Balloon in issue 953. The most popular free gift was issue 2201's Gnasher Snapper, a prank toy that would make a bang sound when unfolded, and was re-gifted occasionally in later issues, as well as the 60th anniversary. During the 25th anniversary of
Dennis the Menace, The Dennis the Menace Fan Club was formed. The fan club was instantly popular, recalls Euan Kerr in 1984; "The club enrolled over 2000 new members every week, well into the 90s[.]" Membership was 30p, and new members received a membership card full of classified communication tactics and two badges: a red one with Dennis' face on the front and a furry one of a
googly-eyed Gnasher face—the latter was the most sought-after badge in the club's history. For two years, there was a tie-in
agony aunt page called
Dear Dennis (issue 1679–1767) where fan club members sent Dennis their problems that Dennis would reply to in the following issue; thousands of letters would arrive at DC Thomson per week and the authors of the messages would receive prizes. The club would be renamed The Beano Club, which ended in 2010, but had over 1.5 million members. A spin-off was introduced called Gnasher's Fang Club, and Gnasher would ask readers to send him stories about their pets' adventures which could be printed into the next issue. "The mailbag of little drawings of pets was several thousand per week," remembers sub-editor Morris Heggie. "And the popularity lasted and lasted." The 21st century celebrated anniversaries with more memorabilia. For
The Beano 70th birthday, DC Thomson published
The Beano Special Collectors Edition: 70 Years of Fun (2008), and
The History of The Beano (2008) was published by Waverly Books, both documenting the magazine's history; two exhibitions at the
University of Dundee (
Happy Birthday, Beano!) and
The Cartoon Museum (
Beano and Dandy Birthday Bash!) showed the public private DC Thomson artwork and the history of the magazine. For 2018, readers could buy a box for the 80th anniversary containing posters, reprints of selected older issues, and two books updating the previous documentation of the magazine's history, as well as
Minnie the Minx origins. Limited-edition figurines from Robert Harrop were available to buy from their official website in late 2008. The 21st century also began
Beano branching into different mediums: their first website, Beanotown.com, formed in 2000, and
Chessington World of Adventures opened Beanoland in the same year. Both would later discontinue but Beanotown.com would be revamped as beano.com, a website full of games,
Beano secrets and other activities for children. Gulliver's Travels opened the Beano 6 Super Ride in May 2021.
The Beano was also the face of the United Kingdom's 2018
Summer Reading Challenge, called Mischief Makers, which included a special Dennis the Menace novel tie-in called
Dennis the Menace and the Chamber of Mischief by Beano artist Nigel Auchterlounie. The Dennis the Menace Fan Club was re-launched as a
phone app, rebranded as The Dennis and Gnasher Fan Club, and allowed readers free membership, printable badges, and pranks. On television, the
Sky Kids show
SO Beano! aired; a TV show with special guests, children presenters, and fun and games, in a similar style to
Friday Download and
Scrambled! Annuals Every year since 1939, the comic has consistently released an
annual, known as
The Beano Book until 2002 and
The Beano Annual from 2003 onwards. In 2018, it was estimated that an original 1939 Beano annual in relatively good condition could be worth up to £1,500.
Spin-off comics Comic libraries Since 1982 the comic, along with
The Dandy, has also run "Comic Library" titles. Released monthly, these titles are a feature-length (usually about 64-page) adventure, featuring a character from the comic itself. They are available in A5 size only. In 1998, these were replaced by the
Fun Size Beano. Fun Size Comics were discontinued in late 2010.
Beano Specials The comic also ran A4-sized
Beano Specials in 1987 with full coloured pages, which later were replaced by
Beano Superstars which ran for 121 issues from 1992 to 2002. These were similar to the Comic Library series. Some of the last issues were printed versions of episodes from the 1996–1998
Dennis and Gnasher animated TV series. A
Beano Poster Comic series was also printed in the early 1990s. The Beano Specials returned in 2003, and are now published seasonally. The issues were numbered, and the first one was a Dennis and Friends special, the last a Christmas reprint special. These were replaced by BeanoMAX in early 2007.
BeanoMAX BeanoMAX was launched in 2007 as a sister comic to
The Beano. It featured many of the same characters and strips, however the stories in
BeanoMAX were aimed at a slightly older audience and were generally longer than their
Beano counterparts. It ran monthly from 2007 to 2013 before being rebranded as the
Dennis the Menace and Gnasher Megazine. It would later be rebranded again as
EPIC! in 2016, by which point it had transitioned into an independent magazine aimed at pre-teens, with
Beano characters only making occasional appearances. The comic ended in 2019, with a total of 151 issues being released across its three iterations.
Plug Plug was a comic based on the eponymous character from
The Bash Street Kids that began with issue dated 24 September 1977, and is notable for being the first comic to make use of
rotogravure printing. The magazine similar in style to I.P.C's
Krazy which had started the previous year. It contained uncharacteristically outlandish material for D C. Thomson, as well as later including celebrity appearances in the comic. The comic revealed Plug's full name to be Percival Proudfoot Plugsley and also gave him a pet monkey by the name of Chumkee. Plug's strip was mostly drawn by
Vic Neill but other artists, including
Dave Gudgeon drew some later strips. Other strips included
Antchester United,
Violent Elizabeth,
Eebagoom, ''Hugh's Zoo
and D'ye Ken John Squeal and his Hopeless Hounds''. The venture was unsuccessful, in part because the comic cost 9p, with the
Beano at the time only costing 4p and most of its rivals priced similarly. It merged with
The Beezer on 24 February 1979.
BeanOLD 44-page special issue 4062, with cover date 21 November 2020, during a
lockdown in the
COVID-19 pandemic had an eight-page adult pullout named
BeanOLD, with cartoons poking fun at British politicians such as
Boris Johnson and
Dominic Cummings, and with appearances by
Greta Thunberg,
Captain Tom, and footballer
Marcus Rashford. The slogan was "2020 has been tough. So tough that even grown-ups need
Beano". ==Beano Studios==