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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: 196 comments

Hi, all! :)

I’d say I’ve been a regular reader of XE for years. I started coming here to download tiny RM episodes that accompanied first five He – Man reviews – that was back in the day when I was still on dial- up. As for my fav article, I’d say it’s the whole “Quest for Bulbasaur” saga. I miss Pokemon – related articles… It’s just that I didn’t join the message boards since they seemed like total mess :) … and here on the blog it seems like it’s a tight group of friends, so posting here feels a bit like crashing a big party few hour too late…
Regarding the Simpsons, we are a bit behind the rest of the world here, as #3 of Simpsons Comic has just been published here, and the last episode I saw is the one where Milhouse moves to the Capital City and Bart and Lisa become best friends.

Chestnuts roasted by Papa_Taz @ 01/28/2008 6:48 AM


This isn’t about “jumping the shark”. An argument could be made that that happened a long time ago. I wish we could all hang out live/in real life so I wouldn’t come off as some sort of armchair/internet hack on this but here goes:
Since the SIMPSONS has been on for so long, it could be compared to pro-wrestling.
My thesis:
WHen the Simpsons came out, everybody loved it, it transcending race and class structures since Bart was a hit with intellecutal high brows and dopey 5th graders, etc. Then it got really good (Seasons 4-6) and people REALLY got into it. Wrestling in the 50′s, same thing.(Gorgeous George, etc.).

Then the show shifted and was still good/great, (seasons 7-9ish) it didn’t have the same hype as people moved on to other things, novelty wore off, etc. Wrestling through the 60′s and 70′s (Killer Kowalski, the rise of Andre the Giant, etc.).

IMO, the strangest thing happened was circa 2000 when there was the 2nd great media blitz of Simpsons-mania. Action figures, BURGER KING toys, CLUE games, etc. Suddenly the Simpsons were back ALTHOUGH the episodes were not that great (Seasons 13-14).
Wrestling, same deal, except with Hogan, Ultimate Warrior, Macho Man, etc. This seemingly “out of no where” 2nd Renaissance of Wrestling. Took the nation by storm but some would say that the wrestling itself was not as technically good, etc.
Finally, you get to Simpsons Season 13 and beyond and you find yourself NOT ABLE TO STOP THE TRAIN. FOX knows it is a cash cow, the writers now were either fans of the show when it was first on and want to recapture former glory (I think tonight’s episode was one of those) OR were not fans and have no idea what happened before (listen to the later DVD commentaries), call it show fatigue/running out of ideas, but I have no idea how/when the show could possibly end. Oh, I know it will but really what is left to cover? Long lost family member? Simpsons did it. Government taking out Springfield? Simpsons did it. Try to write an episode of the Simpsons and realize how difficult it is to be fresh when they have truly done it all (or at least a whole lot).
Wrestling in the late 90′s brought on the 3rd era of greatness but was a victim of it’s own success in the same way the Simpsons has been in that where does one go? If you have a guy thrown off the steel cage, if you have transvestites giving oral sex, if you have the championship belts change hands VERY easily, if you have the undead and CROW-ripoffs, etc. where is there left to go?
Not sure if this rant made a lot of sense (it would have been better live) but I don’t buy the “well, it’s post-modern absurdism, therefore there are no rules” argument. I can forgive a “that could never happen but it’s still funny” sight gag but retcon…

This is the only website I ever post on but I did read a good line on nohomers.net that sums up and is an answer to the “anything they want to do is okay” mentality: “Very little in this episode that the show hasn’t already covered in a more effective manner. I mean, weren’t the first 10 seasons a parody of the 1990s?
Touche, man, touche.

Chestnuts roasted by The Manimal @ 01/28/2008 6:49 AM


DJ D

I just watched the Zombie kid vid on your site that shit had me laughing my ass off. I may have to steal it.

Chestnuts roasted by Mortalwind @ 01/28/2008 6:54 AM


I agree my point was just regarding continuity or the lack of in this particular universe. Of course this dosent have anything to do with quality just the rules of the story. I think somthing can ” jump the shark ” and then come back and be good again. When the Simpsons came out they were unique. Look what they paved the way for more and more envelope pushing ground breaking cartoons in the prime time. This took away a lot of their shine. I feel they are getting a little of that shine back wich im all for.

Chestnuts roasted by Manimal @ 01/28/2008 7:05 AM


Manimal

Sorry dude Im a dyslexic tool shed I posted the above post under Manimal when I ment to direct it to you sorry too many beers, sheesh wow i feel like a tool.

Chestnuts roasted by Mortalwind @ 01/28/2008 7:09 AM


Not sure if that was an accident or what but that is not my post above regardless of what the signature says. I tend not to reply to myself :)

Chestnuts roasted by The Manimal @ 01/28/2008 7:10 AM


It’s cool :)

Chestnuts roasted by The Manimal @ 01/28/2008 7:11 AM


once again sorry wrote in the wrong field

Chestnuts roasted by Mortalwind @ 01/28/2008 7:14 AM


Two Beldings in one building, one of which is balding.

Chestnuts roasted by nork @ 01/28/2008 10:01 AM


One of my favorite articles was Dr. Sbaitso was my only friend. I never thinked I’ve laughed as hard as Matt having a conversation with an 80s computer. Plus its funny how much that one reminds me of being a kid, take a simple dumb thing and two kids could easily be entertained and laugh all night with something like that.

Chestnuts roasted by Rob @ 01/28/2008 11:00 AM


Uhm.
Lemme see. I think I actually came here shortly before Halloween. Of 2007. So I’m less than a year, right now.
I read a few of the older articles once I got here, so I know SOME of the stuff, but not everything.
My first article was probably the deconstruction of his 1992 summer vacation. Bill directed me over here with his handsomely rendered Sharks.

Chestnuts roasted by kittymao @ 01/28/2008 11:18 AM


I’ve been reading X-E for 3+ years, but only started posting a couple of years ago. It took about a year to complete, but I made sure I went through and read every article, blog, etc posted, even the ones a few years back written by that other fella.

It’s hard for me to pick just one favorite, but one of the funniest things I’ve ever read on here was from an article where Matt when around with a pocket full of change buying quarter-machine toys. One of the eggs he bought looked like it’d been sitting for a while, as the contents were melted and discolored. He described it as “penis escrement”, it made me think “here, kid, have some jizz”.

For a couple of years, I’ve had all of the Saved By The Bell articles bookmarked here at work, they’re definitely ranked at the top of my list as well. GREAT articles for a laugh because everything written is the exact stuff I love and laugh at on SBTB.

I think I’ll go read them now.

Chestnuts roasted by nork @ 01/28/2008 11:53 AM


I haven’t read every post from the entire month of January, so I’m sure someone has posted this already, but just in case they haven’t, January 2008 is the 50th anniversary of Lego bricks, as Google informs us this morning.

Chestnuts roasted by Old Jim @ 01/28/2008 12:10 PM


I always wanted one of those T.H.I.N.G.S, but I never got one. :( You don’t happen to have a commercial do you? I’d love to see one of those again.

Chestnuts roasted by Kendra @ 01/28/2008 12:19 PM


I was drawn here by someone linking the review of “The Worst Witch” on some message board somewhere. I laughed until I cried reading Matt’s review and then dug into the archives. Of course, I still haven’t read even half of all the stuff here. I use Matt’s articles as stress relief at work.

Chestnuts roasted by evilbeth @ 01/28/2008 1:02 PM


I actually almost watched the Simpsons last night; glad I didn’t. It used to be one of those “can’t miss” shows but, like many here have said, it seems to have run it’s course. It’s seems now that they just make it to fill the slot. It needed to go out gracefully probably a few years ago. I mean, geez, nearly 400 episodes; no wonder they seem to be retracing their steps….

Chestnuts roasted by Shuanfu @ 01/28/2008 1:02 PM


Completely off topic, but stop what you are doing and see RAMBO NOW!!

Chestnuts roasted by JBUNGIE @ 01/28/2008 1:24 PM


Old Jim
No one else had posted that yet, thanks for the info!

Chestnuts roasted by Dan H @ 01/28/2008 1:45 PM


I strongly recommend that everyone run out immediately and see Rambo. I haven’t laughed so hard in so long…it easily ties Commando for most over-the-top action flick. Though, I must say, there is a lot of graphic imagery (like a child getting bayoneted and another getting flung into a burning hut) used to kill off any possibility of the audience sympathizing with the enemy.

Chestnuts roasted by Ken @ 01/28/2008 2:05 PM


Matt, Thanks for clearing that up. That brings up another question and possible subject of conversation. I’d say that New York, probably more than any other city has been depicted in the movies. Is it strange for you New Yorkers to constantly watch the place where you live on the big screen? Is it surreal or are you just so used to it now that it’s not strange anymore? I’ve mentioned this before, but the movie Death Sentence with Kevin Bacon that came out last year was shot here in downtown Columbia, SC, just a few minutes away from my house. It was really fun to sit it in a theatre and see him running around on the streets that I drive down every day and to see the office buildings I used to work in stretched out on the big screen. I guess this could be directed to anyone who’s seen the city they live in depicted in the movies. Is it srange for you? Fun? Also, how accurate is it? My only experience with New Yorkers is what I see in TV and the movies, and recently my new roommate, who’s from there. Do you think the people and feel of the city are depicted accurately, or is it more often than not an exaggerated stereotype. I’m usually more annoyed than anything else when I see southerners depicted on TV and the movies, and God help me if I see an actor/actress who’s not from here try to do a southern accent. It’s soooo bad. People tend to think that there’s just one accent down here and don’t realize that people from the upstate of SC or from Charleston have a different accent from people from the mountains of Kentucky. Both southern, yet completely different. In fact, if I’m outside of the south and meet a person from the Carolinas or Georgia, I can pick it up in a second, and know that they’re from this area, and not Texas or Kentucky or something like that. Anyways, back to the subject at hand, what do you guys think? When you’ve seen your home cities/states/regions (especially NY) depicted on film, how accurate is it? Which movies/tv shows have done it well? Which ones are gross misrepresentations?

I’m not surprised at all that the Simpsons may have run their course at this point. In fact, I would be surprised if they hadn’t. That’s not to say that it’s still not a good show, but after 400 episodes, you’re going to start repeating yourself and have some ups and downs. I mean, look at Saturday Night Live. It fluctuates from just dreadful to hilarious depending on the cast, decade or individual skit. All I know is I have a huge crush on Amy Pohler. Tina Fey is hot and all, but for my money Pohler’s where it’s at.

As far as wrestling, I agree with almost all of what Manimal said, at least in regards to it being much better 20 years ago. I remember being a kid and kind of thinking it was fun, mostly because a lot of people in my family liked it, but for the last 15 years or so, I think it’s become the most mindless, retarded, embarassing thing ever. The idea that other countries are watching this and that it might be a reflection on American entertainment or culture just makes me almost ashamed to live here. I can’t stand it. I hate this whole trend in the last few years of making white trash fashionable. I honestly don’t see how anyone can watch that crap. I apologize to all you wrestling fans out there, but I pretty much lump it in the same category as Jerry Springer and MTV as being mindless, IQ depleting shit TV which only exists to make us more stupid.

Mortalwind, Steal away. Actually, I’m going to be completely rehauling my MySpace page this week, so it’ll look completely different. It’s way out of date. I’m getting my radio show back on the air and will be making a big announcement about it via bulletins, flyers and what-not by the end of the week (you heard it here first, folks!). I’m also going to start blogging and posting loads of pictures and things and finally make a real go of updating it on a regular basis. Hopefully there will be loads more fun things for you to see and blatantly steal.

evilbeth, I know what you mean. X-E is my workplace sanity saver. In between projects I sneak away to it to catch up on chat and read old articles. Being that I just came into it last year, there’s like 5 years of stuff to go back and catch up on, so it’s nice to know I’m not going to run out anytime soon. I’m slowly trying to indoctrinate a couple of people at work into the X-E fold and it’s going over well so far. They were the subjects of me reviving the “chicken flavored Doritos” experiment.

Chestnuts roasted by DJ D @ 01/28/2008 2:07 PM


“Very little in this episode that the show hasn’t already covered in a more effective manner. I mean, weren’t the first 10 seasons a parody of the 1990s?”

Yes and those were the good seasons. However, the perspective wasn’t the same because this episode focused on characters that were in there 20s in a show where your either 10 or less, 35 or 70+, so I don’t feel this episode was covering the same ground at all. I don’t think this episode felt much like any episode I have seen.

If you want to talk about contunity problems, let’s talk about how many 8th birthday’s Lisa’s had or how many summer vacations has went by between Bart’s 4th and 4th grade class. The fact is if the characters are going to stay the same age, as they should, in a show that tries to be topically relevant, as it should, then you’re going to have to have these kinds of retcons. Jokes about spoiling Empire Strikes Back don’t add up anymore so you tell jokes about grunge music. Sure, you don’t have to have “the way things were” type episodes but these episodes are generally good because we get to see the same old characters in different elements. So it’s not just “do whatever they want it’s fine”, in my opinion it’s “doing what they have to do”

Considering on top of all that, that the show rarely ever made references to older episodes until about season 9 and I just can’t get bunched up over this retconning. Especially when I feel it was done well (the episode was much better than I thought it would be going into it after seeing the commercial for it).

Chestnuts roasted by dohopoki @ 01/28/2008 2:39 PM


I’m surprised I don’t remember these. The ASTRO-NOTS youtube video is great!!

Chestnuts roasted by Joker @ 01/28/2008 3:02 PM


I kinda remember these guys. Egg-zilla actually would go well today, as a 3d version of Perfection. One of my cousins used to have Superfection, back in the day. That one you had to not only put the pieces in place, but each piece had to be assembled from two sub-pieces. The board didn’t have matching slots, so the pieces made squares that rested on a grid. There were overlays where each pair had to be in a certain place, but was only an option for the OCD part of the brain.

By the way, I am the only person who remembers the multiverse before The Crisis of Infinite X-Es. I’m just waiting for Matt-Prime to start punching the walls of the Internet, causing the site to split into 42 parallel versions of itself.

Chestnuts roasted by kingklash writes his own continuity, and yours too! @ 01/28/2008 3:48 PM


I had GO-RILLA! So many memories!

Chestnuts roasted by Lammy742 @ 01/28/2008 5:03 PM


I guess I’m one of the few who enjoyed last night’s episode of “The Simpsons.” Granted, it was another “Let’s see what Marge/Homer were like when they were dating” episode they do every couple of years. But to me the highlight wasn’t the main story, but all background/visual jokes that made fun of everything 90s related.

I do agree that Simpsons has basically lost it’s way. I’m watching more out of loyalty than actually enjoying it. But it is STILL loads better than American Dad.

Chestnuts roasted by JLAJRC @ 01/28/2008 5:14 PM


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