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Milton Bradley’s T.H.I.N.G.S.!

It's kind of shocking that even after all these years of X-E'ing, I still haven't covered all of my favorite childhood toys. Though the focus of tonight's entry didn't exactly set the world on fire during their short stay on toy shelves in the mid '80s, I've long adored their unbridled goofiness and oddball presentation. Meet the T.H.I.N.G.S.!


Produced by Milton Bradley from 1986-1987, T.H.I.N.G.S. ("Totally Hilarious Incredibly Neat Games of Skill") capitalized on its era's penchant for weird toys in a wacky series of timed, hands-on exercises composed of primary colored plastics and bold stickers. They looked more like "prop toys" than real toys -- the kind of stuff you'd see in a kid's bedroom during a movie, so as to avoid unwarranted product placement with playthings that were actually in stores. There was a simplistic, '60s tin toy vibe about these games, and I can only attribute their relative obscurity to a society too stupid to notice the godsends right under their noses at the tail end of TRU's board game aisle.

There were a number of T.H.I.N.G.S. games, all totally unrelated from each other, save for their size and an overall theme of being completely odd. For me, it was all about the presentation. The wonderfully compact boxes maintained a single size and shape throughout the collection, but they came in all different colors, with each game's package featuring beautiful illustrations and more photographs than the toys inside really deserved.


As a kid, my favorite of the bunch was the one pictured above: Eggzilla! As an adult, I realize that Eggzilla is one of the least inspired of all the T.H.I.N.G.S. games, and that my bias towards it only had to do with the fact that the included Godzilla-esque piece could be snatched away from its base and transformed into a veritable action figure with 100x the replay value.

Most (or maybe all?) of the T.H.I.N.G.S. were timed games where you had to complete an activity before a buzzer sounded, or alternatively, something exploded. This is one of the latter cases. The goal is to build Eggzilla's egg before time runs out, at which point he pops upward, breaks through the shell and maybe hits you in the forehead. It wasn't much fun then, and it isn't much fun now. I can totally see why I turned the Eggzilla figure into a comedic dragon pet for my random action figures and tossed the rest. If you'd like to see Eggzilla work his mojo, you can do so in this terribly grainy YouTube video I just made.

Don't leave yet...I have more T.H.I.N.G.S. to show you.


The beauty of the collection was in its overwhelming variety, and I think you'll get a sense of that when you see just how different this game was. Astro-Nots was fitted with an out-of-this-world science fiction theme, featuring spaceships, astronauts and horrible alien creatures of the H. R. Giger variety.


Looks pretty neat, doesn't it? Even more so when you realize that everything shown above is only about as big as my hand. Astro-Nots works much like those magnetic fishing games, where you cast a magnet-charged line into the spinning fishies' mouths and try to catch as many as possible before the world blows up. The main difference here is that you're catching astronauts instead of fish, and you're doing it with a spaceship instead of a plastic fishing pole. Thematically, I'd give the nod to Astro-Nots over its more famous cousin.

See the blue alien guy? After yanking him, he'll slowly eat his way up the string while the Astro-Nots spin with reckless abandon, praying for rescue. If you gather 'em all up and safely plant them into the holding deck before the alien crashes against the wall, you win! Granted, there's nothing stopping you from continuing to pluck up Astro-Nots after the creature hits the wall. With Milton Bradley's one-player T.H.I.N.G.S. games, the honor system was in full effect.

Also: Astro-Nots make for a slightly more exciting YouTube video than Eggzilla.

Other T.H.I.N.G.S. sets featured everything from medieval knights to mad doctors to giant gorillas, and though they lacked the certain collectable je ne sais quoi that was necessary to stay afloat in such a competitive market, I'm happy to have known and fondled them. I'm also happy to have used je ne sais quoi in a sentence today. I'm hardcore.

Posted by Matt on 01/26/2008. E-mail me!



Discussion Thread: 197 comments

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First?

Never heard of them but they look cool.

Chestnuts roasted by The Manimal @ 01/26/2008 11:00 PM


Curse Curse Curse!

I bet a lot of kids died playing that eggzilla game…

Chestnuts roasted by dohopoki @ 01/26/2008 11:01 PM


Oh yeahhh…Nothing says welcome back from a X-E hiatus like getting a first post on a thread in which I know nothing about.

P.S. thanks to DJD and Kneg for keeping my name alive around the office. :)

Chestnuts roasted by The Manimal @ 01/26/2008 11:04 PM


I can never remember if the Doho-Mani Curse has been lifted or still goes on.
My money is on the latter. I am SNT poison.

Chestnuts roasted by The Manimal @ 01/26/2008 11:06 PM


I’ve never seen these before either, but they’re cute.
Hey Manimal! Welcome back :D

Chestnuts roasted by squee4242 @ 01/26/2008 11:07 PM


Wow, what vault did those come out of…….I love the toys of the 80′s

Chestnuts roasted by Knight @ 01/26/2008 11:08 PM


It’s been lifted unless we get the first 5 comments then it cames back and becomes 10x more potent.

*crosses fingers*

Chestnuts roasted by dohopoki @ 01/26/2008 11:08 PM


Never heard of them either, although that Eggzilla game sounds practically identical to that game that was popular in the 90s called “Perfection.” It even had a cool commercial jingle.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O3syQV7WDAU

Anyway, I saw Juno today and it is AWESOME. It also added a new thing to the “Movie props I want” list. I want that hamburger phone. It was so cool looking.

That’s one of the bad things about the cell phone culture, is that it has basically killed off the novelty phone market. Sure you can put “skins” or wallpaper you want on it, but it will NEVER beat the shoe phone, the Mickey Mouse phone, the Garfield phone, or the hamburger phone.

Chestnuts roasted by JLAJRC @ 01/26/2008 11:10 PM


Eggzilla looks like a more engaging version of Perfection. Given enough time I’m sure I could think of an absurd boardgame from my childhood as well… besides Crossfire

Chestnuts roasted by Heza @ 01/26/2008 11:11 PM


Woot! A true SNT!

Chestnuts roasted by MikeyD @ 01/26/2008 11:11 PM


JLA: I always preferred those see-thru neon phones, where you not only got to see the inner mechanics, but also endured brightly shining strips of neon lighting whenever the phone rang. I believe my sister still has such a phone in her basement, which I plan to steal someday.

Chestnuts roasted by Matt @ 01/26/2008 11:11 PM


Perfection has been around since at least the 70s

Chestnuts roasted by dohopoki @ 01/26/2008 11:13 PM


Rock on Matt youve been throwing down some nice post. One request for what its worth, I love the travel articles cant wait to see more of them. I think my all time favorite post is The Worst Gameroom ever. That might be a good subject for SNT. Whats your favorite XE article?

Chestnuts roasted by mortalwind @ 01/26/2008 11:15 PM


Matt
If you have any toys of the late 70′s, or even perennial toys that started in the 70′s and continued into the 80′s, I’d be feelin’ it more – I’m afraid I was already in my early teens by the time the 80′s rolled around… not that I’ll be hatin’ on the toys of your youth, though. I find it fascinating, even though I end up being a third-party observer to all things Transformers and miniature GI Joe… :-) Give me the 10-inch tall GI Joe with the Kung-Fu Grip any day, even though his rubber hands tended to rip off about 2 days after you took him out of the box.

Chestnuts roasted by Old Jim @ 01/26/2008 11:15 PM


Holy crap, I entirely forgot about Eggzilla! My brother and I had at least two (Eggzilla and Flip-O-Potamus)–and considering how anal-retentive we were about retaining many of our childhood toys, we probably still have them packed away somewhere, in its original box.

Hasbro actually has the instruction booklets available on their website, which is kind of weird, considering that they haven’t been in production since the late 1980′s.

Chestnuts roasted by Ell @ 01/26/2008 11:18 PM


Mortalwind,
Second on the worst game room ever. I probably laughed the hardest on the most recent cruise review article (the towel dog). Single funniest line is from HULK HANDS (“Cat, you’ve always had the upper hand…”).
Honorable mention to the mini-golf article and the GPK Movie review.

On an unrelated topic, I am babysitting both girls while Mrs. Manimal deals with the household paperwork and E. Claire only wants to watch the animated DUNGEONS AND DRAGONS (which I bought with my Christmas money in ’06 but never have got around to watching) so, in an effort to get her to go to sleep, I am allowing it. I feel like a bad father…
I am truly bored on a Saturday Night.

Chestnuts roasted by The Manimal @ 01/26/2008 11:23 PM


Ell
Whoa! I just checked out that Hasbro site, and they actually have the manual for the tape recorder that Macauley(sp?) Culkin used in Home Alone 2 – it’s even co-branded with the movie name. The only odd thing about it is the actual model name of the recorder – the Talkgirl Deluxe Cassette Recorder – I guess that’s an indication of its target demographic.

Chestnuts roasted by Old Jim @ 01/26/2008 11:24 PM


They had Talkboys and Talkgirls, I think the only difference was Talkgirls were pink…but I hated pink so I hads me a Talkboy, and what fun it was.

Chestnuts roasted by Heza @ 01/26/2008 11:29 PM


Manimal
lol, glad you concur, DUNGEONS AND DRAGONS has got to be one of my favorite cartoons of my youth. I might need to pick those up. Also I stumbled upon a animated Dragon Lance movie online. Its weird I had never heard of it but it has some preaty big name actors doing the voices. Kiefer sutherland plays raistlin, and lucy lawless plays goldmoon. Oh well its only cool if you read the series.

Chestnuts roasted by Mortalwind @ 01/26/2008 11:30 PM


I remember these things. They weren’t the best toys but they were okay.

Chestnuts roasted by ULTRAMAN @ 01/26/2008 11:35 PM


I’ve probably answered this before and if my answer was different, I was lying. The Mystery of Hostess Choco-Diles! is the article to end all the articles on this site. It’s a food article, it’s an item that doesn’t exist for most of us anymore, it’s got back story, it turns into an adventure article with interesting local and lots of sub-plots, it turns into a mini-click the items on Matt’s floor for descriptions article for many hostess products and faceless Lando, it turns into an article about Hostess mascots with downloadable commercials and finally it gets resolution but only comically tragic bitter sweet resolution. To top it off, I’ve never been able to read the article without going on a Hostess binge.

Chestnuts roasted by dohopoki @ 01/26/2008 11:35 PM


I think my dad still has one of those neon phones. I thought it was badass when I was ten.

Chestnuts roasted by Annette @ 01/26/2008 11:41 PM


Personally, my favorite article that I can recall reading is the one about Matt’s trip to Upstate New York where he went into that wacky general store. Anyone recall the article number, or a key word I can search for it?

Chestnuts roasted by Old Jim @ 01/26/2008 11:44 PM


http://www.x-entertainment.com/articles/0934/

Chestnuts roasted by dohopoki @ 01/26/2008 11:46 PM


One of my favorite articles is the one about the collage from the summer of 1992. Also, the McDonald’s placemats.

Chestnuts roasted by Annette @ 01/26/2008 11:47 PM


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