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Ryan’s Bodacious Weekly Countdown
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Top 5 Unsung Toys of the 80s
We all know the Rubik’s Cube and Atari and Cabbage Patch Kids reigned
supreme on toy shelves in the 80s... but the following are 5 fun toys that
played second fiddle, but were first in my heart.
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5. Pillow People – “Pillow People are lovable... Pillow People are
huggable. Pillow People are lovable, huggable, friends.” Ahhh — what a
jingle. When your Cabbage Patch Kid wasn’t taking up the rest time real
estate on your bed, your Pillow People pal could sneak in for some
snuggling. They even had names: Mr. Sandman (the one that looked stoned),
Pillow Fighter (apparently pillows can pick on other pillows and beat them
to a pillowy pulp) and many others. You could have all the fun of drooling
on a face, without all the embarrassment of realizing you had done so. |
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4. Crossbows and Catapults – C&C put a bit more structure in just
building stuff and knocking it down. You were given little plastic blocks,
that resembled pieces of a wall, and you were responsible for building a
sturdy wall around your castle to protect it from being attacked by your
opponent. You could attack via two ways — shockingly — by crossbow or
catapult. The crossbow, constructed of plastic and a rubber band, shot
your ammo quickly along the ground—while the catapult, my weapon of
choice, allowed you to fling your ammo high into the air, and then have it
land on your opponent’s defenses. I believe C&C partnered with local bars
in order to train young children into one day being truly great Quarters
players. Seriously.... It’s the same concept. It worked for me.... I
lettered in “Quarters” in high school. |
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3.
Wacky Wall Walker – What resembled an oversized booger with
legs, the Wacky Wall Walker was a huge hit. If you didn’t find one in your
cereal box, you could hunt one down in stores. You would take your
Octopus-esque creature, fling it onto the wall or window and it would make
a splat sound that would always induce a child to laughter. It would
slowly make its way down the wall, about 2 feet, and then usually plummet
to the carpet. You would then spend hours de-hairing your Walker so it
would stick properly again when thrown. The instructions always said you
could wash it with soap and it would be as good as new....lies — all
LIES! I think that was made up, so you would just have to go out and buy
another one.... It worked, though — every time — I never learned. |
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2.
Photon – For the kids that couldn’t afford “Laser Tag”, there was
Photon. Laser Tag had a gun and a target.... Photon had a gun, a target,
and a massively oversized helmet, connected to a long spiral cord, which
then connected to a chest plate....oh, and there were belts too. It
actually worked in conjunction with Laser Tag, so if you had friends with
Laser Tag, you could play with them—of course, they would look halfway
normal and you would be the Robo-Tool chasing after them. Photon was for
those boys that really didn’t care about girls.... Because they definitely
weren’t attracting any of them wearing this spacesuit and running, diving,
and army crawling out in their yard. |
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1.
ColecoVision – No Atari? No problem — ColecoVision to the rescue! You
could play QBert, Donkey Kong, Frogger...all the classics on this bad boy.
The controller resembled a large phone handset, complete with numbers and
buttons and a joystick. I played this thing over and over and over.... I
loved my Coleco.... Until the 8 bit Nintendo came out. My dad told me that
I couldn’t get a Nintendo, because I had a perfectly working ColecoVision....
So what’s an 10 year old to do? Take a screwdriver, stick it in the
circuit board, poke around a bit, and voila! — the Coleco is broke.... I
told my dad it wasn’t working right — he verified — and off we went to get
a Nintendo. (Again, Sorry Dad). |
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