Product Update

What Happened to The Magic Candy Factory After Dragons’ Den?

The Magic Candy Factory left the Den without a deal. Here is what happened next: how the pitch went, why the dragons passed, and where The Magic Candy Factory is today.

Dragons' Den IndexUpdated 3 July 20266 min read

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Melissa Snover brought a food grade 3D printer that makes custom sweets into the Den in series 16, and it is one of the stranger pitches in the show's history for a reason that had nothing to do with the product. The short answer on whether it survives today is genuinely uncertain, and it is worth explaining exactly why rather than guessing.

The pitch

The Magic Candy Factory appeared in series 16, episode 13. Melissa Snover asked for 80,000 pounds for just 2 per cent of the business, an unusually small equity slice that valued the company at 4 million pounds. The product itself was genuinely novel: a patented 3D printer that could print custom shapes, messages and designs directly into gummy sweets.

Filming happened in April 2018, though the episode did not air until January 2019, which is worth knowing if you are trying to line up dates with what you find online about the company. The nine month gap between filming and broadcast is common on the show, but it means any snapshot of the business at the time of the pitch is really a snapshot from nearly a year earlier.

Why the equity structure sank it

The sweets themselves were not really the problem. The issue was ownership. Melissa was only a small shareholder in her own pitch, holding around 10 per cent of the company, with a majority stake of roughly 90 per cent sitting with a partner based in Germany.

That is a hard structure for any Dragon to invest in. Putting money in for 2 per cent of a company where the person pitching does not control the business, and where the real decision maker is not in the room, is a governance problem as much as a business one. None of the Dragons made an offer.

It is a pattern worth remembering for anyone watching the show closely. A brilliant product does not automatically get a deal. The Dragons are buying a stake in a decision-making structure as much as a technology, and when that structure sits mostly outside the country and outside the person pitching, the risk profile changes even if the product itself impresses everyone in the room.

What we could confirm after the show

The Magic Candy Factory brand kept a public presence for some time after the episode aired. There has been social media activity under the Magic Candy Factory and Katjes Magic Candy Factory UK names, including posts and video content into the early 2020s, and a Birmingham-based presence associated with the 3D gummy printer concept.

What we could not confirm is current, active trading. We did not find a live, regularly updated storefront selling the printer or its sweets as of the time of writing, and the most recent social activity we could verify dates to around 2022 to 2023 rather than anything more current. Products built around a single patented machine are also unusually exposed to supply and servicing issues, since a printer that breaks down and cannot easily be repaired or replaced can quietly end a product line even while the wider brand name lingers online.

Is the Magic Candy Factory still in business?

Here we have to be honest rather than tidy: the record is genuinely inconclusive. There is enough of a digital footprint (social accounts, a Birmingham association, past video coverage) to say the concept did not vanish the day the episode aired. There is not enough recent, verifiable activity to confidently say the business is actively trading today.

If you are trying to buy a 3D candy printer or custom-printed sweets from this specific company right now, treat the current status as unconfirmed rather than assume either a clean yes or a clean no.

Where things stand now

Melissa Snover pitched a genuinely unusual product in series 16, asking for 80,000 pounds for 2 per cent, and lost the room over an equity structure that put most of the company in someone else's hands. The idea had real novelty and picked up social media attention for a few years afterwards.

Beyond that, the trail goes quiet. Anyone citing a confident answer either way on the Magic Candy Factory's current trading status, without a live storefront to point to, is guessing. The most accurate answer today is unconfirmed, and that honesty matters more than a tidy headline. If you have recent, direct experience buying from the brand, that would carry more weight than anything findable in a search right now.

The Magic Candy Factory

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