Brio

Brio is a wooden train line who once made Thomas the Tank Engine and Friends toys compatible with Wooden Railway in the 1990s. The range was discontinued in 2000.

Engines

 * Thomas
 * Edward
 * Henry
 * Gordon
 * James
 * Percy
 * Toby
 * Duck
 * Oliver
 * Stepney
 * Lady
 * Diesel
 * Daisy
 * The Diesel
 * Diesel 10
 * Splatter and Dodge
 * Duke
 * Skarloey
 * Sir Handel
 * Peter Sam
 * Duncan
 * Rusty
 * Battery Powered Thomas

Rolling Stock

 * Annie and Clarabel
 * Troublesome Truck
 * Toad
 * S. C. Ruffey

Non-Rail Vehicles

 * Terence
 * Bertie
 * Cranky
 * Butch

Human characters

 * Sir Topham Hatt
 * Lady Hatt
 * Workmen
 * Driver
 * Signalman

Destinations

 * The Windmill
 * Level Crossing
 * Wellsworth Station
 * Henry's Tunnel
 * Engine Shed

Sets

 * Thomas Set #1 (with Thomas and The Fat Controller)
 * Thomas Set #2 (with Thomas, Troublesome Truck and The Fat Controller)
 * Thomas, Annie, and Clarabel Set
 * Island of Sodor Playmat

Trivia

 * There were two versions of Duck available; one with green wheels and one with black wheels.
 * Sir Handel's model is given an 0-4-0 wheel arrangement.
 * Some BRIO Thomas items are more accurate compared to their Learning Curve counterparts.
 * Oliver, Skarloey and Peter Sam's models are given 0-6-0 wheel arrangements.
 * The BRIO battery-powered Thomas' model has a front magnet, unlike his Learning Curve counterpart.
 * Gordon is depicted as an 4-6-0.
 * Diesel 10 has a magnet on a string instead of Pinchy.
 * Splatter and Dodge have light grey wheels.
 * The windmill looks a lot like Toby's windmill, despite the fact it was released years before the episode premiered.
 * Butch's BRIO model came out one year before his Learning Curve model.
 * Toby's face on his BRIO model appears to have been modelled after Mavis', despite the fact that Mavis never had her own BRIO model.
 * The BRIO models of Henry, Gordon, and Duke have a hook that connects them to their tenders, but James and Edward use a magnet.
 * Diesel 10's BRIO model's arm is similar to that of a crane's arm, as it can move up, down, sideways, and even extend. The claw has a magnet in it to lift cargo, and is tethered to a string.