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  1. The Atari 2600 revolutionized home entertainment, bringing video games into living rooms around the world. Meanwhile, toys like the Glo Worm combined functionality with comfort, offering kids a unique blend of fun and practicality.

    • Care Bears
    • Atari
    • Strawberry Shortcake
    • Pogo Ball
    • Space Legos
    • Monster in My Pocket
    • Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles
    • Rubik’s Cube
    • Roller Racer
    • Speak & Spell

    The 10 original Care Bears, which wear belly badges to denote their personalities, were intended to be American Greetings card characters in 1981 until they became plush, stuffed Parker Brothers dolls in 1983. By 1985, Cheer Bear, Bedtime Bear, Birthday Bear, Wish Bear, Tenderheart Bear, Good Luck Bear, Love-A-Lot Bear, Friend Bear, Funshine Bear, ...

    Coin-operated arcade amusement took a severe hit when Atari released the first home gaming console, which was created by the founders of the famous arcade game Pong. Atari 2600 came equipped with two joysticks, paddle controllers, a wood-panel printed console, and game cartridges, including “Space Invaders,” “Pac-Man,” and “Asteroids” sold separate...

    Strawberry Shortcake and her sweet-smelling, dessert-themed friends like Lemon Meringue and Blueberry Muffin were all the rage for little girls in the ’80s. An animated television series, Atari video game, and memorabilia including pajamas and bedding accompanied the craze of tiny plastic figurines, which, according to character artist Muriel Fahri...

    The Pogo Ball is a Saturn-looking jumping device manufactured by Hasbro and the cousin of the Pogo Stick, the latter of which is now an official extreme sport. Unlike gaining gravity with a steel coil and footpads, the inflatable ball placed in the centre of a sturdy plastic circle helped kids catch air in the ’80s. After the fad’s popularity began...

    To capitalize on the success of George Lucas’ smash-hit “Star Wars,” The Lego Group, which manufactures plastic toy bricks, created minifigureswith visor-less helmets and wheeled vehicles. It wasn’t until 1999 that the toy manufacturer would issue its first intellectual property licence to “Star Wars,” bringing Lego and Lucas together for real—and ...

    Matchbox’s release of Monster in My Pocket had kids in the ’80s hiding plastic figurines in their garments. Inspired by true-to-life monsters from mythology, religion, literature, and film, the brightly coloured toys first sold based on a “scary” point series, with the Great Beast worth 25, and less frightening figures like The Witch rated at 5. Ho...

    The Italian Renaissance-named reptilians Michelangelo, Donatello, Raphael, and Leonardo are as hot now as they were in 1983 when two artists first sketched them on a piece of paper, which sold for more than $70,000 in 2012. What began as a comic book series turned into a pop-culture craze, beginning with the 1987 Saturday morning cartoon series fea...

    Lining up nine squares on the six-sided, primary-coloured 3D puzzle had kids competing against themselves when the Rubik’s Cube debuted in 1980. Originally named the Magic Cube, the toy’s popularity made finishing fast a sport, with the first speedcubing Rubik’s World Championships in Budapest in 1982. After mid-’90s anniversary relaunches, includi...

    The Roller Racer, a human-powered toy consisting of rams horn-shaped handlebars connected to wheels atop a tractor seat, had kids racing down streets and scientists studying its physics in the ’80s. The side-to-side thrust vector concept, inspired by a retired Boeing engineer as a present for his grandson, was sold by the brand Wham-O, which also p...

    The handheld Texas Instrument toy came with learning cartridges, including Homonym Heroes, Noun Endings, Magnificent Modifiers, and Vowel Ventures. Sister toy to Speak & Read and Speak & Math, the educational game focused solely on the English subject. The learning aid was the first to use digital signal processing, which converted analog sound inf...

  2. Jul 15, 2024 · Atari 2600. Atari was the first kind-of-affordable home video game console to really capture the public's attention. Launched in 1977 with the legendarily infuriating game Pong, the Atari 2600 broke kids' brains in the 1980s. Just like millennials can mark their adolescence as a time before smartphones and after them, kids growing up in the 80s ...

  3. Mar 21, 2007 · I have a working Atari 2600 with close to 80 games. I basically rebuilt my collection from the early 80s and added a few I never bought at the time. I bought the games used, priced from about 99 cents to about $3.99 at Game Swap in the Eastgate Mall in Cincinnati, OH. This was about 2006 or so.

  4. Jan 11, 2024 · The Atari 2600 has sold well over 30 million units in its lifetime, and it’s popularity isn’t about to decrease any time soon. Pick up an Atari Flashback unit below! This console had a cost of US$199 when it first came out, which is equivalent to $839.69 today.

  5. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Atari_2600Atari 2600 - Wikipedia

    The Atari 2600 is a home video game console developed and produced by Atari, Inc. Released in September 1977 as the Atari Video Computer System (Atari VCS), it popularized microprocessor-based hardware and games stored on swappable ROM cartridges, a format first used with the Fairchild Channel F in 1976.

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  7. Enjoy a rewarding project creating all the details of this LEGO replica video game console, replica game 'cartridges' and joystick. Gaming fans will love the 3 mini builds depicting themes from 3 popular Atari games. There’s even a hidden 1980s scene to build for total nostalgia overload.