The Current Situation

It’s the Year of the Sad Horse!

Today — Tuesday, February 17, 2026 — marks the start of the Lunar New Year, and this year is traditionally known as the Year of the Fire Horse.

But thanks to a manufacturing error, it’s also the Year of the Sad Horse.

Illustration by Sketchplanations.

Since the Chinese zodiac characters are animals (here’s their origin story), each new year sees the release of a plush version of that year’s animal, made out in red, gold, and white, which are the colors of good fortune.

Since this is the year of the horse, here’s what this year’s plushie is supposed to look like:

However, because of a manufacturing error, many of those plush horses’ snouts were attached upside-down, turning their smiles into these glum expressions:

Surprisingly, this error made the horses incredibly popular, probably because they’re reflecting the current mood.

From NBC News:

At a time of slowing economic growth and dimming job prospects for many workers, the toy has been embraced as the “cry cry horse” and become an internet sensation.

“The economy hasn’t been great, and life’s been tough for a lot of people these past couple of years,” said Zhang Ziqi, 24, a teacher in Hebei province. “That crying expression really matches how most people feel — stressed, anxious, kind of down.”

“It’s about allowing yourself to not be OK, to admit you’re in a low period,” she said in an interview this week.

Zhang Huoqing, owner of the Happy Sister shop in Yiwu, a wholesale hub in central Zhejiang province, explained that a worker sewed its snout on the wrong way. When a customer pointed out the mistake, she offered a refund — but the customer didn’t return the horse.

Photos of the sad horse appeared online, spread via social media, and it’s now a viral hit.

“Many customers liked it, and then it started selling very well,” she told Reuters. “So we just kept producing them.”

From NBC News:

Since then, Zhang’s shop has been rushing to keep up with orders for the “accidental edition,” including some from overseas, and knockoffs have proliferated online. According to media reports, the worker who first made the mistake has been rewarded with an annual bonus of 8,888 yuan ($1,280) for the next 12 years.

Why 8,888? Because 8 is the lucky number in many Asian cultures. Pronounced in Mandarin, it sounds like which means “to get rich.” In fact, the New Year greeting in Mandarin, gong xi fa cai, really means “Hope you get rich.”

I’ll let Ronnie Chieng explain:

And yes, you can order a Sad Horse here in the U.S.! I ordered mine through Walmart:

If there’s a lesson to be learned from this, it’s that sometimes a bug can be a feature, or as I like to say: “When life gives you SARS, you make SARSaparilla.”

Joey deVilla

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