Rejecting Extrinsic Evidence, TTAB Finds FUNTASYA Confusable with FUNTASIA ADULT SHOP for Clothing and Retail Store Services
The Board sustained a Section 2(d) opposition to registration of the mark FUNTASYA for various clothing items and online retail services featuring clothing, concluding that confusion is likely with the registered mark FUNTASIA ADULT SHOP in the logo form shown below, for "Retail store and online retail store and wholesale store services featuring adult products, videos, DVDs, magazines, toys, novelties, lingerie and leather clothing" [ADULT SHOP disclaimed]. The Board found the marks to be "overall similar," and the goods/services overlapping, rejecting applicant's attempt to import restrictions into the identification of goods "based on alleged real world conditions." In re Stefan Thaler, Serial No. 79395386 (July 7, 2026) [not precedential] (Opinion by Judge Christen M. English).
The Marks: The Board unsurprisingly found FUNTASIA to be the dominant part of the cited mark "because it is the first literal element in the mark and it is displayed in a much larger font than THE ADULT SHOP, which has been disclaimed." As to the words FUNTASYA and FUNTASIA, "[a]verage consumers with a general recollection are unlikely to notice or remember the one letter difference in the last syllable of the words." Since applicant’s mark is in "block letter" form, it "may be displayed in a font style similar to the font style used for the term FUNTASIA in the Cited Mark, which would increase the visual similarity between the marks." The two words are likely to be pronounced the same way.
This similarity in sound is significant because FUNTASIA is the dominant element in the Cited Mark. Indeed, consumers may drop the non-distinctive phrase THE ADULT SHOP when referring to Registrant’s services.
FUNTASYA and FUNTASIA both call to mind the words “fantasia” and “fantasy,” with the registered mark carrying "a connotation and commercial impression of a fantasia or fantasy of a fun, sexual nature." Nonetheless, "the marks still share a similar general connotation and commercial impression related to a fun fantasia or fantasy."
To the extent that for some consumers the marks do not call to mind the words “fantasia” or “fantasy,” the marks will be perceived as coined terms with no particular meaning. Because the dominant term FUNTASIA in the Cited Mark is nearly identical to Applicant’s coined mark FUNTASYA, the marks would likely be perceived the same, albeit with the Cited Mark conveying an added sexual connotation
The Board concluded that consumers are likely to perceive applicant's mark "as a variation of the Cited Mark identifying a line extension or to otherwise mistakenly believe that Applicant’s goods and services are associated with or sponsored by Registrant."
The Goods/Services: Applicant argued that registrant’s services, trade channels are limited to sexual products sold through adult sex shops and to consumers seeking intimate products that are purchased only after age verification. The Board, however, pointed out that there are no such restrictions in the cited registration.
Registrant’s identification does not include any limitations on the nature of these services, the trade channels through which they are sold or the relevant consumers. Nor may we consider extrinsic evidence on how Registrant uses its mark to narrow these services.
The Board focused its analysis on registrant’s “retail store and online retail store and wholesale store services featuring … leather clothing.” Applicant's goods are "clothing, namely, shirts, pants, hats, shorts, jerseys, hoodies," an identification broad enough to encompass leather shirts and pants. Because services featuring leather clothing encompass a subset of applicant’s goods, namely, leather pants and shirts, "here is overlap on the face of Applicant’s Class 25 and Registrant’s Class 35 identifications."
Applicant’s Class 35 services include “retail online store services featuring clothing; retail and wholesale online store services featuring clothing.” These services are broad enough to encompass Registrant’s “retail and online retail store and wholesale store services featuring … leather clothing.”
As to applicant's clothing items, where “one party uses its mark on goods that are sold in retail [and wholesale] stores that customarily vend those goods, it is clear that the trade channels and customers overlap.” With respect to the services, because they are in-part legally identical and there are no restrictions as to trade channels or consumers in the identifications, the Board presumed that the identical services travel through the same channels of trade to the same purchasers.As to purchaser care, applicant asserted that "it is self-evident that the respective purchasers of Applicant’s and Registrant’s goods and services exercise entirely different levels of discernment." "Again, this argument relies on a restriction (goods sold through an adult sex shop) that is not identified in Registrant’s identification.
Finding that none of the DuPont factors favored applicant, it sustained the opposition.
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TTABlogger comment: Do you think there is any likelihood of confusion in the real world?Should applicant seek restriction of the registration under Section 18?
Text Copyright John L. Welch 2026.





























