Cyber Dog bites your headphones — 3D Print Pick (May 31)

Cyber Dog bites your headphones — 3D Print Pick (May 31)

Cyber Dog: Universal Headphone Holder by KrakDrag (Cults3D, May 29) is a print-in-place cyberpunk dog-head headphone holder with a movable jaw and retractable teeth. It earned Best + Trending badges within 2 days of publishing (1,300+ views, 22 likes, 13 downloads). Commercial resale rights require a Thangs "Vip access/Print seller" membership at $8/month (annual). Full print settings, filament guidance, and a complete cost model are included — estimated 58–69% gross margin at $19.99 retail.

3D Print Pick
2026/5/31 · 22:20
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Today's pick is the Cyber Dog: Universal Headphone Holder by KrakDrag, published on Cults3D on May 29.1 It is a print-in-place cyberpunk dog head with a movable jaw and retractable teeth that physically clamp down on your headphones. No supports, no glue, no hardware. The STL costs $3.98; selling prints requires an active Thangs membership from KrakDrag — at $8/month (annual billing) it covers every design in his catalog.2

What it is

The model arrives as seven files: a single-piece STL for the dog head, a two-part snap-fit stand (Part 1 + Part 2), a separate wall-mount hanger, and pre-colored 3MF files optimized for Bambu Lab and Snapmaker printers.1 The dog head is the same part in all configurations — the stand and hanger are interchangeable mounting options.
As KrakDrag describes it: "Place your headphones, and watch as the lower jaw snaps shut while the upper teeth descend, locking your headphones in place!"1 The mechanism is fully print-in-place — no post-print assembly needed for the jaw.
The model hit 1,300+ views, 22 likes, and 13 downloads within two days of publishing, picking up both the 🏆 Best and 🔥 Trending badges on Cults3D.1 For context, KrakDrag has 43 designs on Cults3D with 28,300+ total downloads and 3,600+ followers, and holds top-tier Popular, Seller, Makes, and Influencer badges — not a new designer testing the waters.1

Commercial license — read before printing a single unit

The Cults3D listing carries a CULTS PU (private use only) flag. Selling physical prints is only permitted under KrakDrag's Thangs membership. The tier you need is "Vip access/Print seller" at $8/month on annual billing (~$10/month on monthly billing).2
KrakDrag states the terms directly: "All patrons who hold Tier: 'Vip access/Print seller' active on Thangs, will be allowed to sell physical 3D prints of ANY KrakDrag designs."2
Three things the license requires:
  1. Keep the Thangs membership active — the resale right lapses if you cancel.
  2. Add attribution to each listing: "Licensed seller of KrakDrag designs: [your Thangs ID]."
  3. Never modify, resell, share, or redistribute the digital files.
The membership also bundles up to 4 KrakDrag model downloads per month and early access to new releases — meaning the $8/month can cover multiple SKUs if you rotate through his catalog.

KrakDrag publishes explicit settings for this model.1 The hanger gets heavier infill than the body because it bears the full weight of the headphones on a wall screw.
PartWallsInfillSupports
Dog head + stand base2 (0.4 mm nozzle)15%None
Wall hanger3 (0.4 mm nozzle)50%None
Layer height: 0.2 mm is the community standard for print-in-place mechanisms; finer layers improve jaw clearance but add print time. Nozzle: 0.4 mm as specified. Bed adhesion: the README ZIP includes an optional built-in brim version if your first layer adhesion is inconsistent.
Estimated print time: ~3–5 hours total — dog head approximately 2–3 hours, stand approximately 1–2 hours, hanger approximately 30 minutes. These are author estimates based on typical FDM speeds at 0.2 mm; actual time varies by printer profile.
Estimated filament: ~80–120 g across all parts (dog head ~50–70 g, stand ~20–30 g, hanger ~10–20 g).
Difficulty: beginner. Print-in-place with no supports is as straightforward as FDM gets. The jaw mechanism needs clearance to release from the bed — if it feels fused after printing, a gentle flex or a blunt tool run along the jaw line will free it. No glue, no screws needed for the stand version.
Cyber Dog in two colorways — wall-mounted version and desktop stand version side by side
Both mounting modes from one model: wall-mount (left) and snap-fit desktop stand (right). 1

Filament suggestions

The included 3MF files give you two ready-to-go color schemes:
  • Fast Version — 2 base colors + 2 eye colors (simpler AMS setup)
  • Deluxe Version — 4 colors distributed across the head (more visual depth)
For single-extruder printers, the cyberpunk aesthetic works best with bold metallic or matte colors:
  • Silver + red metallic PLA — matches the reference renders and photographs sharply against dark desk surfaces. Best first-batch choice.
  • Gold + orange metallic PLA — the alternate colorway from the designer's photos; warmer tone, still clearly cyberpunk.
  • Matte black + neon accent — for buyers who run all-black setups; a contrasting neon filament swap mid-print (or paint pen for the eyes) separates it clearly from a plain black print.
Avoid soft or translucent filaments — the mechanical jaw detail reads better with opaque, high-contrast colors. PLA+ or PLA Pro is worth the small cost premium over standard PLA for the jaw mechanism's long-term durability.
Cyber Dog silver-red colorway desktop stand, front view, gripping black headphones
Silver-red desktop stand — the jaw locks headphones in place without any hardware. 1

Who buys it and what to charge

The primary buyer is a gamer or streamer (ages 18–35) with over-ear headphones and a desk setup they've already invested in. Cyberpunk is a persistent desk aesthetic — RGB peripherals, dark surfaces, mech keyboards — and a print that physically interacts with the headphones (rather than just sitting behind them) photographs well for setup shots on Reddit and social media.
The secondary angle is gifting: a $20 desk piece for the gamer who has most things, ships flat in a small box, and arrives with an obvious tactile moment when the jaw snaps shut.
Comparable novelty headphone stands on Amazon and Etsy-adjacent marketplaces sit in the $15–35 range for printed pieces. 1 Note: Etsy search was inaccessible during research; the $15–35 range is an author estimate based on comparable product categories.
One practical advantage: the wall-mount and desktop stand are separate SKUs from one print session. Listing both versions lets you test price sensitivity without additional tooling.
Suggested Etsy keywords: cyberpunk headphone holder, gaming desk accessory, 3D printed headphone stand, robot dog desk decor, gamer gift, sci-fi desk organizer, mechanical dog headphone hanger.

Cost model

Assumptions: PLA filament at $20/kg, ~100 g total (mid-range estimate), sold at $19.99 list price. Etsy fees per published schedule.3 Membership cost amortized across 20 units/month.
Cost itemLowHigh
PLA filament (~80–120 g, mid: 100 g)$1.60$2.40
Electricity / machine wear$0.75$1.50
Packaging$1.00$1.50
Material subtotal$3.35$5.40
Thangs membership ($8/mo ÷ 20 units)$0.40$0.40
STL cost ($3.98 one-time ÷ 20 units)$0.20$0.20
License/file amortization$0.60$0.60
Etsy listing fee$0.20$0.20
Etsy transaction fee (6.5% of $19.99)$1.30$1.30
Etsy payment processing (~3% + $0.25)$0.85$0.85
Etsy fees subtotal$2.35$2.35
Total cost$6.30$8.35
Net at $19.99 list price$13.69$11.64
Gross margin~69%~58%
Two variables to watch:
  • Membership amortization: The $0.60/unit figure above assumes 20 units sold per month. At 10 units/month, the combined per-unit license cost rises to $1.20 — still manageable, but factor it in before setting your floor price.
  • Etsy Offsite Ads: Shops under $10,000/year in sales pay 15% on any off-platform ad-driven sale (opt-out available in Shop Settings).3 On a $19.99 sale that's an extra $3.00/unit — disable this early.

Get the files

STL purchase ($3.98). Commercial license via Thangs "Vip access/Print seller" membership ($8/month annual) — confirm the resale terms at the membership page before listing.
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