

Other bars produced included Wonka Xploder, Wonkalate and Wonka Biscuits. The brand was launched by Chicago's Breaker Confections in 1976, and purchased by Nestle in 1988. Wonka Bars consisted of small graham cracker pieces dipped in milk chocolate. Manufactured by Nestlé and sold under their Willy Wonka Candy Company brand, Wonka Bars sold in the United States until January 2010. Wolper claims the bar was released to stores, but quickly recalled due to a production problem. In the documentary Pure Imagination, producer David L. The Quaker Oats Company, which financed the 1971 film with US$3 million, originally created a chocolate bar in time to publicize the 1971 film. The consumer product Wonka Bar was a chocolate bar inspired by the novel and the films Willy Wonka & the Chocolate Factory and Charlie and the Chocolate Factory. The consumer product Wonka Bar from 2005 to 2010.

Wonka had invented over two hundred kinds of Wonka bars (though the actual number available varies, with four flavours in the 2005 film). In the book, Grandpa Joe mentions that Mr. In the 2005 version, the wrappers feature different shades of a color (depending on the type of chocolate bar) and are also more detailed, including a more stylised "W" without a top hat, and the chocolate bars strikingly resemble king-sized Kit Kat chocolate bars, only slightly bigger. The wrappers of the 1971 version are brown with an orange and pink border with a top hat over the "W" in Wonka, similar to the film's logo, and the chocolate bars resemble Cadbury Dairy Milk chocolate bars.

In Roald Dahl's novel Charlie and the Chocolate Factory and its film adaptations, a Wonka Bar is a chocolate bar and Willy Wonka’s signature product, said to be the "perfect candy bar". These bars were discontinued in January 2010 due to poor sales. Other varieties of Wonka Bars were subsequently manufactured and sold in the real world, formerly by the Willy Wonka Candy Company, a division of Nestlé. Quaker Oats had a problem with the formulation of the bars and Wonka Bars had to be pulled from store shelves. The movie was funded largely by Quaker Oats for the intention of promoting the soon to be released Wonka Bars. Wonka bars were created by Quaker Oats (in conjunction with the producers of Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory). Wonka Bars appear in both film adaptations of the novel, Willy Wonka & the Chocolate Factory (1971) and Charlie and the Chocolate Factory (2005), and the play, Charlie and the Chocolate Factory the Musical (2013) each with different packaging.

The Wonka Bar is a fictional chocolate bar, introduced as a key story point in the 1964 novel Charlie and the Chocolate Factory by Roald Dahl. Prop Wonka Bars from 2005's Charlie and the Chocolate Factory.
