“…Although isolated d‐block metallocenium cations have been known since ferrocenium, [Fe(Cp) 2 ] + , was isolated in 1952 and Ln metallocenium cations, [Ln(Cp) 2 ] + , were first predicted in 1956 by Birmingham and Wilkinson, it was only recently with the report of the dysprosocenium complex [Dy(Cp ttt ) 2 ][B(C 6 F 5 ) 4 ] (Cp ttt =C 5 H 2 t Bu 3 ‐1,2,4, 1 ‐ Dy ), and heavy Ln metallocenium homologues [Ln(Cp ttt ) 2 ][B(C 6 F 5 ) 4 ] ( 1 ‐ Ln , Ln=Y, Gd, Tb, Ho, Er, Tm, Yb, Lu), that structurally authenticated Ln metallocenium complexes with no equatorial interactions were achieved. The paucity of isolated Ln metallocenium cations prior to 2017 can be attributed to the propensity for large electropositive Ln III cations to maximise their coordination numbers, coupled with their preference for hard donor ligands not being well‐satisfied by soft Cp R coordination .…”