Discount codes from the retailers I actually shop at and the people I actually work with. Real audience benefits — not paid endorsements. Use them, save some money, support the channel a little along the way.
Redbeard's is the best online novelty stop I've found — sparklers, snakes, smoke balls, ground spinners, the classic novelty tank haul. Real quality, fair prices, fast shipping. They set up this code as a real audience benefit, and I get a small credit when you use it. That's the entire arrangement.
Red Apple is one of the cleaner online aerial retailers in the hobby. This is Polar Bear's code, not mine. He's been ordering from them for years and set it up for his audience. If you live in a state where aerial fireworks are legal, this is your discount. The credit goes to Polar Bear, the discount goes to you.
These are affiliate codes. When you use one at checkout, the retailer tracks it back to me (or to Polar Bear, on his code) and we get a small commission or credit. You get the discount either way. If the discount didn't beat what you'd get without a code, this page wouldn't exist.
What these codes do not do: influence editorial coverage. Redbeard's doesn't get better reviews because of the BEASTLOL code. Red Apple doesn't get coverage on the Beast channel because Polar Bear has a deal with them. The Bible's rankings are the Bible's rankings. Paid placements aren't a thing here, and I'd kill the affiliate side before I'd put a paid review in the editorial.
If you want to support the channel without buying anything, the Bible is the better path — that's a direct purchase, not an affiliate split, and it's where the real editorial work lives.
The 2026 Fireworks Bible is 127 pages of unsponsored editorial — every fountain ranked, every batch warning, exact prices, the rewrap encyclopedia. It's the real product. Codes are a side benefit.
See the 2026 Bible