


Sweets Cam Herrero V2 Turbo Kendama is one of those damas that looks wild before you even pick it up. The green-to-yellow-to-orange fade on the tama, black splatter-style graphic, green string, and natural wood ken give it a proper high-energy skate-shop vibe. It feels like a piece of gear made for someone who is always playing, always progressing, and always chasing the next trick.
This is Cam Herrero’s updated Kendamalicious Mod, and Sweets says Cam has been part of their team since 2021, calling him a true kendama Legend and a positive force in the community.
The build is properly dialed: maple/beech ken, Turbo Shape, beech tama, Anti-Skid 2.0, plus stickers and a replacement string. The maple/beech combo gives the ken a crisp, dependable feel, while the beech tama keeps it classic.
Anti-Skid 2.0 gives the tama grip without making it feel totally stuck, so you still have room to adjust when you are working balance tricks, stalls, lunars, lighthouses, and flow lines. The Turbo Shape is a newer Sweets shape designed by Christian Fraser. Sweets describes it as an updated modern shape developed from the Boost, with a sleek silhouette that feels good in hand and is honed for taps and kenflips. It also features a Break-In Bevel, designed to help make stalls more locked in as the tama breaks in.










Sweets Kendamas is a Minnesota-based kendama brand founded in 2010 by Matt “Sweets” Jorgenson. Born from a backyard shed and a love for skill toys, Sweets has grown into one of the leading names in modern kendama, known for creative designs, player-focused shapes, hand-painted finishes, tutorials, pro models, and a massive global community.
From first spikes to competition-level tricks, Sweets keeps kendama fun, challenging, and seriously addictive. For skaters, fingerboarders, yo-yo players, and anyone who loves progression-based play, Sweets Kendamas brings that same “one more try” energy in the palm of your hand.
What makes Sweets special is that it feels less like a toy company and more like a real scene. Kendama has the same addictive progression as skateboarding, fingerboarding, yo-yo, freestyle, and other skill-based cultures: you miss, you miss, you miss, then suddenly you lace the trick and you are hooked.




