I raced my matchbox cars in single elimination tournaments.
Depends on how you shoot 'em. I never saw a difference when I was stunt ramp shooting them out my window.Hot Wheels were faster...
Cool. Sounds like a nice collection.Oh, nice one! I had an aircraft carrier and several planes, as well as my dad's American GI vs. the Nazi toy soldiers. The amount of destruction inflicted would have been catastrophic in the wars my friends and I had.
You'll shoot your eye out!
I had the second release of some BSG toys. Modular Colonial Viper/crawler/other ships, plus the Cylon Raider. The first ones had little red missiles that would shoot out of them. Of course (even in the 70's), some dumbass kid shot one down his throat or something, so they had to rework them with a "T" shape at the back end so they couldn't actually shoot out anymore.
Another toy I had, and not one single girl I ever met had this toy, was the Fisher Price Adventure People. I freaking LOVED that. That little plastic Jeep went down our stairs more times than I could count. It was great for imagining oh-so-dramatic plots where our heroes went crashing off my bed, and then had to make camp in that cool blue tent, and then take the canoe through the carpet to the hot springs...er, heating vent. It was SUCH a cool toy--I don't remember who gave it to me or if I picked it out for myself, but I freaking loved it.
Army soldiers! I think I still have them. Loved to put them in a plant my mom had and have them fight one another.
I would sometimes set up my lite-bright to look like a mainframe, but i could never the the blinkenlights effect.
I had some of the cheaper, smaller Transformers, such as the ones that turned into cassette tapes that you could put into Soundwave.So let's try to get the thread going again by talking about the Toys That Eluded Us.
Here's what I mean. When GIJOE and The Transformers came out I was one of the bajillions who bought in whole hog, especially Transformers. Watched the cartoon, read the Marvel comics and of course, desperately wanted the toys, specifically my two favorites:
AUTOBOT JAZZ
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and DECEPTICON SOUNDWAVE
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Now I come from a poor family, so getting anything less practical than socks for
Christmas or birthdays was a genuine treat, but I did get such things, as all of the toys i've talked about so far were gifts, and I even got Transformers as gifts. These ones:
ULTRA MAGNUS
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JETFIRE
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SHOCKWAVE
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and METROPLEX
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Now I can't say that my family didn't come through for me. Not only are these great toys in their own right, they're all bigger and more expensive than the ones I actually wanted. But...I was left with that unfulfilled desire all the way until I had a full time job and could start bidding on ebay.
So, while you're thinking about the toys you got to play with, are there any you always dreamed of having but never got until you could gift yourself with them, or never got at all?
Yeah, those were the main reason I wanted Soundwave. I think the original toy came with one of the birds and you had to buy the others as accessories. then later they came up with the Autobot version Blaster, but it just wasn't the same.I had some of the cheaper, smaller Transformers, such as the ones that turned into cassette tapes that you could put into Soundwave.
Kor
They made a version for bridges, too. I had that one.This isn't about the Netflix series, though it is the inspiration as it's been on my mind lately.
The Netflix series was mainly about toy lines that have a broad effect on the culture as a whole. This thread is really about the toys that made you. What were your favorites to play with? Which ones occupied your imagination? Did you have any that might have inspired your current career?
When I was really young I liked building things, so I had a ridiculous number of model kits, mainly of warplanes and warships. There were also two building sets that I was obsessed with. The first, of course, was LEGO. This was back in the day when there weren't a whole bunch of specialty sets. I had a bare bones one, where you just got a pile of bricks and made whatever you pleased.
The other is probably less well known nowadays but I could spend hours with it. It was the Girder and Panel playset.
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The idea was that you could take a box full of snap-together girders like this:
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And some plastic panels with windows and doors drawn in them and make skyscrapers of all types, some beautifully designed:
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or that make no kind of architectural sense:
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While Girder and Panel does seem to have a nostalgic following I doubt it could compete in today's franchise-obsessed toy marketplace, which I think is too bad.
What toys do you remember fondly?
Somebody else mentioned Bridge and Tunnel in the thread. i didn't even know about until this thread.
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