|   | |
| Company type | Private | 
|---|---|
| Industry | Consumer electronics accessories | 
| Founded | November 2011 | 
| Founder | Adam Ijaz | 
| Headquarters | Toronto, Ontario, Canada | 
| Products | Skins, phone cases, screen protectors, accessories | 
| Website |  dbrand | 
Dbrand Inc. is a Canadian company that produces accessories for consumer electronics. It is based in Toronto, Ontario, and was founded in November 2011 by Adam Ijaz. The company sells vinyl skins, cases, screen protectors, and related products for smartphones, laptops, gaming consoles, and other devices. It operates primarily through online direct sales. [1]
In October 2021, Dbrand released custom matte black PS5 faceplates called Darkplates. The company publicly challenged Sony Interactive Entertainment to sue them. Sony later issued a cease-and-desist letter alleging design infringement. Dbrand complied and temporarily pulled the product but returned with "Darkplates 2.0", redesigned with additional ventilation to avoid infringement. [2] [3]
In April 2024, an Indian-origin customer named Bhuwan Chitransh complained about a defective MacBook skin on Twitter (now X). Dbrand responded by mocking his surname with the tweet: "Your last name is basically shit rash, be serious." The tweet sparked widespread backlash as racially insensitive and was viewed millions of times. [4]
Tech YouTuber Marques Brownlee (MKBHD) stated that he would no longer work with the brand unless the tweet was deleted. Dbrand deleted the tweet and issued a public apology the next day, calling the situation a “huge fumble” and offered Chitransh US$10,000 as a goodwill gesture. CEO Adam Ijaz acknowledged the remark as a “severe lapse in judgment” and promised future restraint. [1] [5] [6]
In June 2025, Dbrand’s Killswitch case for the Nintendo Switch 2 was found to interfere with Joy-Con controller connections due to poorly toleranced magnet retention clips. After initially blaming users, the company apologized publicly, describing their own response as “spectacularly terrible,” and committed to sending free revised units. [7] [8]