Monday, December 28, 2009

Big Trak (bigtrak) (Vehicle Toyline)

Manufactured by Milton Bradley (under Milton Bradley Electronics)
Released in November 1979
Original Manufacturer Retail Price: $43.00, Dump Trailer $12.00
Via BIGTRAK Homepage, In The 80s, Big Eyed Monster, and Skooldays
Wikipedia Entry

The Big Trak was apparently a feat of modern toy electronics. It was an advanced, programmable robot that happened to be a vehicle.

Wikipedia explains Big Trak as, "...a six-wheeled tank with a front-mounted blue photon beam headlamp, and a keypad on top. The toy could remember up to 16 commands which it then executed in sequence (such as "go forward 5 lengths", "pause", "turn 30 degrees right", "fire phaser" and so on. There was a "repeat" instruction allowing simple loops, but the language was not Turing complete, lacking branching instructions; the Big Trak also lacked any sort of sensor input other than the wheel sensors."



From the catalog: "Let Big Trak's electronic memory treat you to an absolutely spectacular performance. Just punch in your program of commands and watch Big Trak carry them out: moving forward, backward, left and right, up to 99 length units! Order Big Trak to picot into a sharp or wide-angled turn, full circle, or even beyond that. Big Trak can lurk silently before continuing on its course, and can fire either a single shot or a volley from its "photon" cannon. Send Big Trak out of the room, around furniture and other obstacles, and back again! Easy enough for kids to learn, but so much fun, even adults won't be able to resist. One 9 volt transistor and four 1.5 volt "D" size batteries."

Bug Eyed Monster says, "Big Trak's only accessory was the Big Trak Transport, a dump truck like attachment that could be dragged along behind it.
From the catalog: "Fascinating companion unit of Big Trak that automatically hooks up to Big Trak's electronic cicuitry. Watch Big Trak Transport haul loads and suddenly dump them on a pre programmed command. The Transport's sleek design offers great maneuverability and allows the unit to take turns and corners in stride. A great accessory to a great toy!" 


Short Big Trak Demo Video




The Commercial can be seen here.

Hot Wheels Bigfoot Crunch Arena (Playset)

Manufactured by Mattel
Released in 1989 (Commercial Trademark is 1991)
Via In The 80s



Bigfoot was huge in the 80's. "He" was the Hulk Hogan of monster trucks and, of course, had a lot of toy merchandising. This playset is remembered by In The 80s as a, "...set [that] came with Big Foot monster truck (although the truck was really small), cardboard piece with dirt graphics, and slots to install 6 crushable cars. The cars were red, and blue. They were made of some sort of soft plastic that could be remolded after being crushed, with all of the wrinkles still visible. They would tear up after constant crushing and remolding."

Beetlejuice (Kenner and Burger King Toys) (Toyline)

Manufactured by Kenner
Released in 1989
Via In The 80s

Beetlejuice was one of the most unique movies and one of my faves from the 80's. The Kenner line of toys based off the film were very detailed with several different types of characters, playsets, even vehicles. The Neighborhood Nasties line introduced new, cartoonier characters to the toyline.


 
Burger King also carried a cartoony, non-poseable line of the movie toys.  Here's a look at those.





Sunday, December 27, 2009

Battleship, Electronic Battleship, and Electronic Talking Battleship

Manufactured by Milton Bradley
Released in 1943 (pen and paper version, original plastic board game release is not listed), 1977 Electronic Battleship, 1989 Electronic Talking Battleship
Wikipedia Entry

I probably don't need to tell you what Battleship is. Although two of its iterations were made before the 80's, Electronic Talking Battleship was released in 1989. Wikipedia explains the pen and paper version of Battleship, "...is played on four square grids, two for each player. The grids are typically square – usually 10 × 10 – and the individual squares in the grid are identified by letter and number. On one grid the player arranges ships and records the shots by the opponent. On the other grid the player records their own shots. Before play begins, each player arranges a number of ships secretly on the grid for that player. Each ship occupies a number of consecutive squares on the grid, arranged either horizontally or vertically. The number of squares for each ship is determined by the type of the ship. The ships cannot overlap (i.e., at most one ship can occupy any given square in the grid)."
That was basically the concept for the original plastic Battleship Board Game. For some reason, the original release of the plastic board game is nowhere to be found online.




Electronic Battleship was released in 1979 (1977 according to Board Game Geek). This used the same rules except that the board game was one piece with electronic lights and sounds.





At the end of the 80's, Milton Bradley released Electronic Talking Battleship. Guess what it did.



Battleship was also released as a  video game on the Amiga, Atari ST, Commodore 64, and ZX Spectrum. A popular release was on the Nintendo Entertainment System. Wikipedia Entry for that is here

.





More and more versions of this uberpopular classic have survived many versions styles and rip-offs over the years. Definitely an 80's staple.


Battle Beasts [Shadow Warriors] (Toyline)

Manufactured by Hasbro
Released in 1987
Via Flickr Site, Toy Archive, Nijirain.com (Italian), Beastformers.Com, Sylvain Heyser's Beastformers page
Wikipedia Entry

This is gonna be a big one. Hold on to your hats!
Battle Beasts were cool to me. I loved rediscovering a toy when I was a kid and I would by scores of these lil' guys from the dollar store.
Most of this post will be info I found at other sites cuz, weirdly enuff, there's a lot of information covering Battle Beasts.
 


Wikipedia looks to tell us Battle Beasts, " ...is a line of small 2" tall action figure toys, in the form of an anthropomorphised animal with body armor and a unique weapon. Several figures have their left hand replaced by a weapon of some kind. Battle Beasts were created by Takara of Japan in 1987. Tomy Co., Ltd., aka K.K. Takara-Tomy, still owns the worldwide rights to the property. The heyday for the toyline came during the period in which it was licensed to Hasbro for distribution outside of Japan when Hasbro marketed the toys in America and many other parts of the world. Although in the Japanese market Takara branded the toys as a spin-off of Transformers and even named the toys "BeastFormers," their tie-in to the Transformers universe was not part of the Hasbro story or marketing. As part of the Takara strategy, many of the Battle Beasts appeared in the episode "Rebellion on Planet Beast" of the Japanese Transformers cartoon series Transformers: The Headmasters."

 

 

 

Toy Archive says, "Battle Beasts were small 1" tall figures released by Hasbro in 1986. Each Beast had heat sensitive sticker on their chest. When rubbed, it would reveal if the Battle Beast was Fire, Wood or Water. Each Beast also carried their own weapon. Vehicles and playsets were also produced, as well as a large assortment of novelty items. Hasbro released more figures to create a total of 76 different Battle Beasts. Starting with a White Lion (#1) and ending with a Orangatang (#76). Following the Battle Beasts were the "Shadowbeasts" or "Laserbeasts" in Japan. The heat sensitive sticker was replaced by a orb that you can see into that would depict which clan the beast belonged to. The new Laser Beasts carried Guns that resembled the creature who held it. The entire new series of 36 Laser Beasts and new vehicles were mainly released in Japan. The lower numbered Lasers were produced in Europe, along with a few unique sleds. North America only received 10 of the new Lasers packaged in Shadowbeast packages." 

Oh, but there's so more! After the first 3 series, they switched it a bit. Wikipedia explains, "The fourth and final Series released was renamed Shadow Warriors, or Laser Beasts in Japan. The heat sensitive sticker was replaced by an orb that could be seen through, depicting which clan the Beast represented.
The Shadow Warriors had a new slogan on the American package that read Fire! Wood! Water!... Only the crystal shield will reveal their strength!. Shadow Warriors carried guns instead of the hand-to-hand weapons that the Battle Beasts had, and each gun resembled the creature which it belonged to."




Did I mention there are vehicles and bases? While I could never find any (nor the Shadow Warriors rebranded toys), I did recently see some Chariots for sale at a local flea market. Too bad I didn't have any Battle Beasts to stick in 'em. Wikipedia says, "A decent amount of vehicles were released throughout the line. For the Battle Beast line, three chariots and three bases were released that looked like animals, each came with one figure that was not unique to the vehicle. The chariots were able to hold up to three figures comfortably and each had its own name: Tearin' Tiger, which looked like a tiger, Big Horn which looked like a ram and Deer Stalker which looked like a deer. All the chariots had a pull-back motion that would spring the vehicle forward when it was released. The three bases were the Blazing Eagle, Shocking Shark and Wood Beetle. Each base had a unique symbol theme that matched the "Fire, Wood, Water" concept that the line was based on. Each base could hold several figures and had a jail-cell with which to hold captured Beasts."



 

Toy Checklist -

Series 1
1. Pirate Lion
2. Deer Stalker
3. Ferocious Tiger
4. Colonel Bird
5. Killer Carp
6. Triple Threat Snake
7. Horny Toad
8. Sledgehammer Elephant
9. Rocky Rhino
10. Roamin' Buffalo
11. Grizzly Bear
12. Blitzkrieg Bat
13. Gargantuan Gorilla
14. Swiny Boar
15. Grusome Gator
16. Sly Fox
17. Hardtop Tortoise
18. Rubberneck Giraffe
19. Prickly Porcupine
20. Sawtooth Shark
21. Danger Dog
22. Hare-Razing Rabbit
23. Sir Sire Horse
24. War Weasel
25. Bloodthirsty Bison
26. Bighorn Sheep
27. Webslinger Spider
28. Crusty Crab

Series 2
29. Icky Iguana
30. Armored Armadillo
31. Jaded Jaguar
32. Humungus Hippo
33. Major Moose
34. Delta Chameleon
35. Kickback Kangaroo
36. Octillian Octopus
37. Wolfgang Walrus
38. Powerhouse Mouse
39. Dragoon Raccoon
40. Antic Anteater
41. Run Amuck Duck
42. Miner Mole
43. Cutthroat Cuttlefish
44. Eager Beaver
45. Slasher Seahorse
46. Knight Owl
47. Hunchback Camel
48. Pillager Polar Bear
49. Squire Squirrel
50. Saber Sword Tiger
51. Bludgeoning Bulldog
52. Pew-trid Skunk

Series 3
53. Panzer Panda
54. Leapin' Lizard
55. Killer Koala
56. Tarsier Tyrany
57. Black Panther
58. Torrential Tapir
59. King Cobra
60. Manic Mandrill
61. Pixelated Pointer
62. Pillager Pig
63. Rowdy Rooster
64. Musky Ox
65. Tangolin' Pangolin
66. Slowpoke Sloth
67. Ardent Aardvark
68. Bodacious Bovine
69. Zealot Zebra
70. Harrier Hawk
71. Diving Duckbill
72. Crooked Crow
73. Frenzied Flamingo
74. Fleet-Footed Antelope
75. Pugnacious Penguin
76. Ossified Orangutan

Series 4 - Shadow Warriors
77. Blue Eagle
78. Spark Shark
79. Sailon
80. Anarchy
81. Tigerburn
82. Condorassin
83. Grand Wolf
84. Fly Sailor
85. Zariganian
86. Rainbow Sam
87. Shool
88. Brain Mouse
89. Brown Lion
90. Grencats
91. Fight Horn
92. Hustlebear
93. Battle Fennec
94. Killer Hound
95. Dragon Seahorn
96. Strong Hurricane
97. Sea Panic
98. Puzzlecolor
99. Mantfrenzy
100. Scoup Cougar
101. Skullgrotess
102. King Buster
103. Slag King
104. Jeerer Monkey
105. Hornhead
106. Monkey Fighter
107. Flying Dragon
108. Kickback
109. Skybat
110. Grin Reefer
111. Salmomanther
112. DinoGator

Chariots
Tearin' Tiger
Deer Stalker
Battling Big Horn

Transports
Shocking Shark
Wood Beetle
Blazing Eagle

Battle Chargers
Battle Eagle
Battle Buzzsaw
Battle Savanna




Barrel Of Monkeys

Manufactured by Lakeside Toys, later Milton Bradley
Released in 1965
Wikipedia Entry




Not much to this game. Wikipedia explains Barrel of Monkeys as, "The barrel contains 12 monkeys, their color usually corresponding to the barrel's color. The instructions on the bottom of the barrel state "Dump monkeys onto table. Pick up one monkey by an arm. Hook other arm through a second monkey's arm. Continue making a chain. Your turn is over when a monkey is dropped." In addition to these basic instructions, the barrel also contains instructions for playing alone or with two or more players."

A riot!





Barnyard Commandos (Toyline)

Manufactured by Playmates
Released in 1989
Via Virtual Toy Chest and Retrojunk
Wikipedia Entry

While I was getting out of toys like this around 1989, I thought this toyline could have been a good idea if they utilized more barnyard animals. It's another group of army soldiers and playsets based off something unusual.

Via Virtual Toy Chest - The toy boxes tell us, "In the heartland of America, the reminants of a secret military experiment have been burried for many years. This was soon to change. One day, strange things started happening down on the farm. Farmer Bob's latest crop of grain had an odd glow to it. After eating some of the grain the Pigs and Sheep started acting kindof funny. Some started driving the tractors around like tanks, others started digging trenches. Soon after an all out war erupted, between the Barnyard Commandos!!!"


Wikipedia says, "The property is based around the concept of farm animals who consumed radioactive materials left over from an abandoned military experiment, mutating them into hyper-intelligent, anthropomorphic paramilitary troops. This consists of two "hilariously harmless" opposing teams: the R.A.M.S. (Rebel Army of Military Sheep) and the P.O.R.K.S. (Platoon of Rebel Killer Swine).

Two series of Barnyard Commandos were produced, each including several figures from both teams. Similar to Mattel's Food Fighters, the figures are non-poseable and made of soft, hollow plastic much like squeaky toys. They each include a weapon accessory that fastens onto the figure and a brief, humorous character description on the cardback.
Burger King also produced a series of tie-in toys as Kids' Meal premiums."





Toy Checklist -

Series 1

R.A.M.S.

  • Sergeant Woolly Pullover
  • Commodore Fleece Cardigan
  • Major Legger Mutton
  • Pilot Fluff Pendleton

P.O.R.K.S.

  • General Hamfat Lardo
  • Private Side O'Bacon
  • Sergeant Shoat N. Sweet
  • Captain Tusker Chitlins

Series 2

R.A.M.S.

  • Master Sargent Cornelius Cannonfodder
  • Private Bull Bellwether
  • Commander Missiles Muttonchop
  • Lieutenant Sureshot Shearling

P.O.R.K.S.

  • Corporal Hy Ondahog
  • Staff Sergeant Blaster McBacon
  • Major Piggyback Gunner
  • Captain Hogg Wilde

Vehicles

  • Bacon Bomber
  • Pork Chopper
  • Pork-A-Pult
  • Ram Tank

Home Video

The four episodes of the series were released to four NTSC VHS tapes with one episode each.
  • Apple-Calypse Now
  • Back to the Farm
  • Treasure of Ram Pork Mountain
  • Ultimate Quest
Video of show opening -



A Bad Case of Worms

via X-Entertainment

Simple. Two sticky worms coiled into small case with a handle. The worms were sticky and could stick without residue to most flat surfaces.




Saturday, December 26, 2009

Star Bird (Vehicle Toyline)

Manufactured by Milton Bradley (now under Hasbro)
Released in 1979
Via Bug Eyed Monster, Handheld Museum, Toys You Had, and Stone Foundation Entertainment
Wikipedia Entry

Ever had one of those toys that your parents got you and you thought to yourself, "What the hell is that? That's not Star Wars. It's not Star Trek. What kind of toy is this?"
After playing with it for ten minutes, you realize that it's one of the coolest toys ever.

I had one of these that was bought, sans box and most of its labeling, from a thrift store. Still worked, too!

I've discovered that there's way more to this toy than I ever thought. Wikipedia gives us this lengthy info, "The toy was constructed in three main pieces: the front inner hull which held the electronics and front lasers, the front outer hull (a thin plastic shell over the inner hull), the main body consisting of the center stalk like section and wings. A molded plastic engine piece fitted into the rear of the main body and was removable. The toy is only used in three configurations: the Star Bird which consists of all available pieces, the Star Bird Fighter which is mostly only the front hull attached to the bare engine piece, and the Star Bird Orbiter which is the main body without the front outer hull. When turned on the Star Bird mimics an engine sound. If the toy is pointed upwards the sound would be altered by a ball bearing switch to imply a doppler effect acceleration or taking-off, while a nose down orientation gives the sound of decelerating engines. A button at the rear of the cockpit activates the LEDs at the front of the toy, along with a blast noise, to simulate the firing of its lasers. The button was designed to be pressed by the thumb while the ship was held by the main body or engine piece (in "dragster" configuration). Two simple, detachable drone-like "Interceptors" are provided at the end of each wing. Star Bird also had a rotating laser turret which doubled as an escape-pod/orbiter-type ship."



 

Bug Eyed Monster tells us, "There are two main models of Starbird, the Electronic Starbird and the Star Bird Space Avenger which was also boxed as the StarBird Avenger. Depending on the model, there are diferent sticker sets. The lasers on the Avenger’s nose are set closer together, the canopy plastic is much darker. The Avenger was a second release of the Starbird and included updated electronics that could both send and receive infrared signals. The Avenger model comes with a "target" to shoot at to test your skill with the infrared lasers."





Finally, Toys You Had says, "[The Star Bird Space Intruder] came out in early 1980 and is of a totally different design (other than the front portion). Developed along with the Star Bird, the Star Bird Command Base was a huge cardboard and paper playset to dock your spaceship at.  It came with tiny plastic men and vehicles and had some neat prop pieces, but nothing terribly exciting."

Awesome toyline that I may get my hands on...one year. 

The A-Team - The Adventures with B.A. Card Game (Card Game)

Manufactured by Parker Brothers (now under Hasbro Games)
Released in 1983
Number of Players: 2-4
Via BoardGameGeek 

The A-Team was quite popular back in my day. Because of this, Parker Brothers tried, unsuccessfully, to make their exploits fun for the whole family. BoardGameGeek tells us, "A series of Track Cards are laid out to form a road that acts as the game board. Players are dealt 4 Number Cards and a number of Vehicle Markers depending on the number of players. On a turn, a player places a Vehicle Marker on the next empty Track Card and follows the directions on the card. These allow you to draw a Number Card, ask another player for a specific type of Number Card, or to look at another player's hand and take the Number Card you want. If you have a pair of matching numbers, you place them in the discard pile and go again. Instead of placing a Vehicle Marker on the next Track Card, you may instead give it to another player. The game ends when someone plays their last Vehicle Marker, or when the End Card is reached on the track, in which case the player with the fewest Markers wins."


 
 
 

A-Team (Board Game)

Manufactured by Parker Brothers (now under Hasbro Games)
Released in 1984
Number of Players: 2-4
Via In The 80s, Sydlexia, and BoardGameGeek

Never having played this game, I'm gonna let the other sites tell you about it. In The 80s didn't give it a nice review, saying, "This was a pretty lame game where you had little cardboard cutouts of each character [from the show] which sat in little stands. The board consisted of various spaces which made a spiral to the centre. There were cards (similar to Monopoly) and each space had a different direction for the player. Not a lot of fun... I believe dice were used to control player movement."



BoardGameGeek goes on to say, "In The A-Team - B.A. Lends a Hand in the Race for the Formula the top secret formula for a famous soft drink has been stolen by a crafty madman and his evil band. They are holding it for ransom at the island fortress from which they operate. The internationally-renowned
company that owns the formula has hired The A-Team to go into the fortress and retrieve it before the public - and Wall Street - find out about it! The madman knows that The A-Team is on to him so he has set up a deadly game which they must play once inside the fortress. Dressed in outfits to look like
fortress guards, The A-Team members must work alone to find the formula. But Hannibal is crafty, too. He has sent B.A. in ahead of the others to infiltrate. B.A. knows "where it's at" and so he'll be there to help you in your mission. Good luck."


Seriously? 




 

Sydlexia sums it all up by saying, " The A-Team's board game doesn't do a very good job of capturing the spirit of the show, but it is chock full of B.A. Baracus. Also, it's a reasonably fun experience. At the very least, it's reasonably short experience; with all those action cards and Roll Again spaces, you'll be in and out of the fortress faster than a drunken frat boy with a sorority pledge. And since most board games tend to go on long after they stop being fun, this brevity is a welcome change of pace. But really, that's really the nicest thing I can say about The A-Team game; it's short. Aside from that, it's the same as an other TV-based board game: faddish, poorly translated to the medium, and completely unnecessary."

Army G.E.A.R. (Toyline)

Manufactured by Galoob
Released in 1988
Via In The 80s and Virtual Toy Chest

Toys that turned into other toys in the 80's was a huge fad. This toy concept was one of my faves.
The toyline usually consisted of army surplus gear (made to child scale) that opened up and turned into mini-playsets complete with soldiers. While most Army G.E.A.R. toys followed this concept, some went oveboard -one toy was a Medal Badge that turned into a sci-fi one man flying vehicle. Extra figures could also be purchased.

Toy Checklist -
  • Auto Pistol / Missile Staging Base
  • Binoculars / Laser Tracking Station
  • Canteen / Aircraft Carrier
  • Combat Medals / Assault Vehicles
  • Combat Ready Accessory Set
  • Combat Troops
  • Compass / Satellite Station
  • Grenade / Bunker
  • Knife / Attack Boat
  • M-16 / Weapons Arsenal
  • Machette / Observation Post
  • Pistol / Missile Silo
  • Searchlight / Air Defense Station
  • Walkie Talkie / Drone Launching Base
  • Watch / Missile Post

The above pic shows international versions.

Army Ants (Toyline)

Manufactured by Hasbro
Released in 1987
Via Virtual Toy Chest
Wikipedia Entry

This, in my opinion, long overdue toy idea was made into fruition in 1987. The toys were non-posable toy soldiers released in "squadrons" (groups, of course) of an Orange army and a Blue army. The squadrons consisted of three or eight figures set on card-backed blister packs.. All the Army Ants had individual names.

According to the Virtual Toy Chest Army Ants page, "The Army Ants struggle to conquer the vast land that is your backyard. Two opposing armies engage in deadly combat to control important resources. The orange army is lead by General Patant. His forces include an assault team, sniper team, bazooka team, aerial assault team, and his special strike force. The blue army is lead by General Mc-Anther. His forces include a mortar team, artillery team, flame thrower squad, bomber squad, and his personal special forces. Only time will tell the ultimate victor of this epic battle on a micro scale."




Etch-A-Sketch Animator and Etch-A-Sketch Animator 2000

Manufactured by Ohio Art
Released in 1986, 2000 released in 1988
Image via Drawingtoy.com 
Wikipedia Entry on Etch-A-Sketch

These two drawing toys were trying to take the original Etch-A-Sketch to a new level by animating the pics you drew. According to Wikipedia, "[The original Animator] featured a low-resolution dot matrix display and used two knobs for drawing, like a regular Etch A Sketch, with several buttons to manipulate said drawings. It had a few kilobytes of memory, capable of storing 12 frames of pictures in any combination up to 96 times. It contained a speaker, which made static-like sounds when the knobs were moved and during animations."

Ohio Art released the 2000 sequel as an upgraded version. Wikipedia goes on to note, "It used a stylus to draw on an interfacing pad, and the drawing appeared above on a low-resolution LCD screen. It had the ability to animate a sequence of frames as well as the ability to save animations on memory cartridges. The Animator 2000 could also play games loaded on cartridges. Three games were developed for it: Overdrive, a racing game in the vein of Pole Position; Putt Nuts, an 18-hole miniature golf game; and Flyby, a simplistic flight simulator. The Animator 2000 was discontinued shortly after its introduction, rendering copies of some of these games scarce."



 


 

The Animal (Vehicle Toyline)

Manufactured by Galoob
Released in 1984
Via Retrojunk

Not the most easily researched toy, Retrojunk says, "The Animal was a battery operated (not radio controlled) monster truck by Galoob. The original Animal came in three flavors, Power Pickup, Angry ATV and Fierce Firebird. All of these were essentially identical save for different body stylings. the Power Pickup was of course a black pick up truck complete with a realistic bug guard, bright yellow rollbar and grey exhaust pipes sticking out from under the front fenders. The Angry ATV was identical except it was bright red and had the body of an SUV. Fierce Firebird was of course a bright yellow firebird with no bug guard or exhaust pipes.
Of course, all of these shared the all important gimmick. They had freakin claws in their freakin wheels! and these weren't just any claws, these things were reactive. It was like some sort of mutant traction control. The truck would be rolling along all la dee da, when suddenly it would encounter a rock (or other deliberately placed obstacle) and "Oh no! The truck is stuck!" then BAM! CLAWS!"

The following is a commercial for The Animal that TV shows BOMBARDED us with in the 80's. I haven't had that jingle stuck in my head in over 20 years.

Amaze-A-Tron

Manufactured by Coleco
Released in 1979
Via In The 80s and Handheld Museum

According to In The 80s, the Coleco Amaze-A-Tron was an, "...electronic handheld. A grid of 25 squares on a touchpad. The computer selected a start and end point, and you had to find a path between the two by listening to sounds and watching the LED indicators. Some imagination and patience was required, but good fun all 'round!"


Air Raiders (Toyline)

Manufactured by Hasbro
Released in 1987
Via In The 80s, Retroland, and Air Raiders Tripod page

Air Raiders was a failed but very fleshed out toyline with 2 inch action figures with air powered, missile firing vehicles. Air Raiders was obviously a new big thing for Hasbro at the time, complete with a comic book series, coloring books, etc. The toyline featured warring factions (The Air Raiders and The Tyrants of Wind) with information inserts featuring a large background story on the factions and characters.

According to The Air Raiders Tripod page, "Among the flurry of toy ideas in the 1980's, Hasbro came up with the line of the Air Raiders.  It was quite an interesting concept, utilizing air firing missles, unique vehicles, and 2 inch figures.  The line was unsuccessful, probably due to under exposure with no cartoon or other merchandise to compliment the toy line.  Air Raiders only lasted one series, but they remain a neat facet in the history of the 80's action figure boom."




According to Retroland, "If Hasbro’s noteworthy ensemble of air and land vehicles with their aerodynamic designs didn’t impress, the names and accoutrements certainly did. Toys such as Wind Razor and Twin Lightning not only offered fantastic monikers, but features that took them beyond the tried and tossed hand-pushed toys of the past. The secret to Air Raiders was found in the name itself as designers implemented air-powered missile launchers into other flying vehicles such as Thunderhammer, Man-O-War, and Wind Seeker. The Tyrants of the Wind flagship Dragonwind featured an air-launched glider and the Air Raider land cruiser Storm Dagger could even be launched from its very own air-compression platform. Adding two-inch tall poseable action figures gave you the beginnings of your very own fleet. These drivers and pilots could be purchased separately in packs of five, with more Raiders found in the Battle Squad pack and the Enforcer pack unleashing more Tyrants. Perhaps no accessory was quite as cool as the Command Outpost, the Air Raider base. Along with twin missile launchers and six action figures, the Command Outpost also had an air-activated avalanche, useful for crushing the occasional incursion of pesky Tyrants. Hasbro even rewarded fans with mail-in offers that included maps, gliders, extra missiles, and even… Aerozar himself!"





Commercial with no sound -

TOMY Air Jammers (Vehicle Toyline)

Manufactured by TOMY
Released in early to mid-eighties (unknown)
Via In the 80s and Virtual Toy Chest

Toy vehicles that were powered with a hand operated air pump. Hard to find info but seemed commonplace to find during the eighties. According to Virtual Toy Chest, "In the early 80s Tomy released a series of air powered toys under the name Air Jammers. The first was a dune buggy called the Road Rammer. It had a large air tank that you could pressurize with a hand pump. The pressurized air powered a single piston engine that drove the car. Tomy then released a VW Bug called the Bug Scrammer, a cycle called the Cycle Scrammer, and an ATV called the Super 3 Wheeler Honda ATC."


Adventure Vision

Manufactured by Entex
Released in 1982
Original suggested retail price: $79.99


The Entex Adventure Vision was one of the first portable video game systems that used cartridges. It was a battery powered tabletop console that ran on four D batteries.
According to Handheld Museum, "It created a display by using a single vertical column of 40 LEDs, and a spinning mirror to simulate 150 vertical rows (thus basically making it 150x40 resolution). Only four games were ever made for it, all based on arcade games: Defender (by Williams) (pack-in game), Turtles (by Stern/Konami) (#6076), Super Cobra (by Konami) (#6077) and Space Force (an Asteroids clone by Venture Line) (#6078). The cartridges are simply 2532 EPROMs with the pins wrapped around a plastic Molex connector to fit into the cartridge slot (which is just the other half of the same Molex connector)."

Apparently, the system was very rare (only 10,000 made, although Bit Museum said 50,000) and was very fragile.

 

 

Here's a Bit Museum video covering the Adventure Vision -