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The Hundred Dollar Toys “R” Us Shopping Spree: Part 1!

I was originally going to compile all of this into one big article, but then I remembered that I work during the week and tend to dissolve into slush on the weekends. Rather than fuck myself again, let's split it into parts and strike while I'm still excited. It's time for PART ONE of my great, big, huge, gigantic, enormous $100 Toys "R" Us shopping spree report!


As you'll recall, Toys "R" Us received the popular vote in this thread, where I challenged you to tell me where to blow my $100 American Express gift card. Truth be told, I had no doubt that TRU would take the prize, and I probably would've rigged the poll with fake comments from "George223" and "PlanetAwesome" had it been necessary. I've always wanted to do a Toys "R" Us shopping spree.

In fact, I can't imagine that anyone who grew up when I did would feel any differently. I can't count the number of sweepstakes I entered and lost for such an opportunity. It seemed like the chance to win a thousand dollar TRU shopping spree sprung up at least once every six months throughout the '80s, and though I was only afforded one-tenth the budget for this project, the joy was still enough to make good on the trillion childhood dreams I had -- dreams of combing the aisles with a shopping cart full of everything, tossing in video game after action figure after candy bar with all the gleeful abandon of a pig in shit.


No two Toys "R" Us stores are exactly alike, even if they seem to be on the surface. For this expedition, I had to pick my local store, which had stood in the same spot since before I was even born, and was ground zero for virtually every toy-related hunt of my life. It wouldn't be even a slight exaggeration to say that I could fill a book with memories of this single Toys "R" Us store. From meeting Darth Vader there in '84 to begging workers to "check the back" for an elusive Mondo Gecko all throughout '89, this has been one of my very few chosen places where all is right with the world.

I can't say for sure if I became a collector in adulthood out of mere appreciation for toys, or simply because I refused to let go of that sense of euphoria during my youth. Even today, where my toy store runs are limited to finding kids' birthday presents or something new to write about on the site, I still muster the same sense of tranquility that I assume other people feel when they step foot into their local sports team's arena, or, I dunno, Grandma's house.


The $100 shopping spree commenced this past Sunday afternoon, and the photo above does little to convey the absolute pandemonium I endured. Clumsily navigating a worn-out wagon around aloof parents and at least a dozen kids who had those ridiculous wheels built into their sneakers (I'm just jealous), my mission wasn't easy. I didn't want to limit myself to the two or three aisles of "major" brands. My goal was to comb through every last crevice of the store, questing to dig up all of the weird-but-amazing crap that isn't popular enough to be stocked where anyone incapable of crouching can find it.

With bruised knees and calloused fingers, I return to you now, the proud owner of $100.17 worth of brilliant garbage. It would've been $99.17, but the lady at the register had a really good hook for her "donate a dollar to autistic kids" speech. As much as I wanted to come in on budget, it's tough to respond indifferently to such phrases as, "hey, since you saved so much money on our clearance sales, would you mind donating a dollar to save an autistic child's life?" And even if I was considering saying no, she asked it loud enough for five other people to turn our way in wait of my inevitable response: "Sure, you bet!"

I digress. It's time to talk toys. Tonight's entry covers 33.3333% of the goods; I'll cover the remaining throughout the week. Oh, and should anyone doubt the validity of my wild stories about the prices I paid, keep in mind that I will scan and provide the full receipt when we wrap this up in Part 3.


TMNT "Michelangelo" Figure - $7.99: During my journey, I tried to steer clear of the big brands. But this guy just called to me. I can't remember if I've ever told this story -- probably have -- but I fell into the original Ninja Turtles toy collection by pure incidence. My brother gave me a few of the figures for Christmas in '88, which was technically a misfire for him since I'd only seen the cartoon a few times and hadn't at all been bit by the still-burgeoning wave of Turlemania.

And yet, something about those figures touched me immediately. They were brightly colored, being turtles and all, but they such an innate simplicity that one could've very well pictured Santa's elves crafting them with bits of plastic and small tubes of paint. As the toy industry headed into the '90s, most of the action figure lines became detailed to the point of being overdetailed. You couldn't run your finger down a four-inch dude's leg without trying to figure out if he had grenades sculpted over his calves or was merely happy to see you.

Many of the newer TMNT figures continue on with this intangible charm, but none to the level of the bug-eyed Michelangelo shown above, with skin three shades lighter than his brothers, and an expression shared only by Kevin McCallister when he stumbled upon the in-room mini-bar during Home Alone 2. Though an eight dollar price tag seemed a bit steep, I take solace in knowing that Michelangelo is exactly the type of turtle who'd get a real kick out of costing more than a dollar per inch.


Edu Science Authentic Fossils Collection - $4.99: Hidden near the back of the store, even beyond the lesser-visited Play-Doh and Crayola aisles, Toys "R" Us has a rather impressive section of "real learning" toys, ranging from virtual frog dissection kits to Sea-Monkeys, with a couple of foam great white shark dolls thrown in for good measure. I could've easily blown the entire hundred bucks on that stuff, but since I didn't want to bore anyone, I limited myself to this five dollar collection of totally legitimate fossils.

While I'll concede that the glory is lost once you open the package and have nothing but a handful of oddly shaped coral to show for it, the bubbly, term-filled window display makes that an easy folly to avoid. I mean, why bother opening the package if you're going to lose the ability to tell the difference between your trilobite and ammonite? The shark's tooth seems like the odd man out of the bunch, but I think we can all agree that no fossil collection is worth buying if it doesn't include at least one shark's tooth. It's kind of an unspoken law.


Hungry Hungry Hippos "Fun on the Run" Game - 5.99: I'm not entirely pleased with this purchase, and I think I've finally figured out why. I set my sights on the full-sized version, but since TRU was charging almost twenty dollars for it, the travel-sized edition seemed like a fair consolation prize. Only it isn't. And it's not because it isn't big enough, or even because there are only two technicolor hippopotamuses as opposed to the typical four.

It's the marbles. The shitty, lightweight plastic marbles cannot compete with the deliciously loud and clangy sounds made by the larger marbles in the full-sized edition. When I play this one, I never have the sense that I'm actively satiating my chosen hippo. I can't imagine that even a hungry hippo one-third the size of the ones I'm used to feeding would be satisfied with marbles so inconsequentially quiet and non-clangy.

I guess it was silly to expect that all of my purchases would be home runs, but this one stings harder since I passed on a far cooler travel-sized edition of Connect-4 for it. Yeah, there are less clingy clangs going on with that one too, but at least I wouldn't feel like I'm disappointing hippopotamuses with it.


Nerfoop - 4.99: My shopping spree was spiked with as much nostalgia as a romp through an old Sears Wishbook, so there was no way I could pass up this lost glory of youth: The Nerfoop! A small, harmless basketball hoop with a small, harmless foam basketball might not seem like the makings of the party of the century, but it really comes together to form exactly that.

The best part is, I've matured enough to where I'm not going to make the same mistakes I did as a kid; namely, the idea that I can slam dunk the little basketball without smashing the Nerfoop into thirty pieces. It's times like these that I wish we still used typewriters, for what scribe wouldn't cream at the opportunity to write a page of crap, tear it out, crunch it up and nail a swish through a Nerfoop that was strategically placed over a garbage pail? As things stand now, the best I can do is challenge the woman to a little one-on-one to decide which of us has to make the next pot of coffee.

The best tribute I can afford the Nerfoop is this: I don't know where most of the junk I bought will be in a month's time, but the Nerfoop? It'll still be in my living room. Definitely.


Star Wars "Character Wheel" - TEN CENTS!!! Before I tell you what a Star Wars "Character Wheel" is, I must reflect upon a visit to Toys "R" Us long, long ago. Back when they still had the giant bicycle section. It was probably 1987 or so. I couldn't believe my eyes as I passed by a rack full of Wheeled Warriors accessory packs, not just because Wheeled Warriors toys hadn't been made for years by then, but also because of their ridiculously insane price of eight cents a pack.

Needless to say, I bought each and every one of them, the total amount nearing twenty, and my mother couldn't debate the decision since even twenty Wheeled Warriors accessory packs still cost less than a single action figure from any other line. The accessory packs consisted of random guns and add-ons for Wheeled Warriors vehicles, and even though I owned not a single of those by that point, a bargain was a bargain.

I got these "Character Wheels" for the same reason, and this is proven by the fact that I bought not one of them, but ten. They're just little spinny wheel checklists of Star Wars action figures and LEGO sets, pointless for every endeavor outside of makeshift frisbee competitions, but at ten cents a pop, my only regret is that I didn't buy the remaining fifty. I'm seriously thinking about going back to collect the rest. I'm seriously thinking about being the least popular house on the block come next Halloween. Helllllllo fairy princess child...I do so like your faux wings...I do so hope you enjoy this STAR WARS CHARACTER WHEEL! Tricked and treated at the same time, biiiiitch.

That'll do it for Part 1. Let it be known that the ten-cent Star Wars frisbee wasn't even the cheapest thing I bought. If you yearn to learn what could possibly be cheaper than that, stay tuned for Part 2, coming sometime this year, or maybe the next.


I still can't believe it. TEN CENTS!

Posted by Matt on 04/07/2008. E-mail me!



Discussion Thread: 118 comments

Id like to be around anyone BUT Rapheal… Needless to say I think he is the most like me.

Chestnuts roasted by SamAel @ 04/07/2008 10:15 PM


Ahhhhhhhh! This is so weird, seeing pictures from other TRU’s. Working at one makes me immediately go “Why the fuck is the preschool section so close to board games?!”

I’ve been eying up that fossil set, along with the “mineral” set as well.

The Lego Spinner was actually a free giveaway when you bought any Lego Star Wars set, a while back. I can’t even believe any store still has them! If you look close at the shelf label, on the right of the barcode, there’s a 1, then an X. The X means they won’t carry it any longer – another reason for it being 10 cents.

I can’t wait to see the rest of the loot. :D

Chestnuts roasted by Ryane @ 04/07/2008 10:17 PM


lol, does that mean you can’t stand yourself ?

Chestnuts roasted by ULTRAMAN @ 04/07/2008 10:18 PM


You sure have a lot of stuff on your shelves! Do you dust all that stuff? or just throw it out once in a while and start over?

Chestnuts roasted by Rev. BackItOnUp @ 04/07/2008 10:29 PM


haha yea I cant stand my temper and lonerness.

Chestnuts roasted by SamAel @ 04/07/2008 10:33 PM


Matt,

for some reason 7.99 seems cheap for an action figure… does do (or anyone) have any insight into the prices say in the late 80′s, compared to now?

Chestnuts roasted by penmissile @ 04/07/2008 10:34 PM


Looks like an interesting haul so far.

When I was a kid, I always liked Mikey, but now that I’m older, Don is where it’s at. Well…the 1990 movie version, anyway. That movie is way better than it has any right to be.

Chestnuts roasted by Annette @ 04/07/2008 10:36 PM


do you* my english is top notch

Chestnuts roasted by pen @ 04/07/2008 10:37 PM


When my brother was a kid, he could get a GI Joe or Star Wars figure for a dollar to $1.50. By the time I got into it, Star Wars figures were $3.99. Add a dollar to that each time a prequel came out, and now it’s $7 for a 3 3/4 inch figure. Those are Walmart prices, anyway, which is all I’ve got around here.

Chestnuts roasted by FyarlGirl @ 04/07/2008 10:39 PM


Excellent finds, Matt!

I need to raid a TRU soon. I was born in ’87 but hell yes, do I remember those Big Bike aisles. Those kicked ass, especially when those “Power Wheels” started taking hold on the industry. Is it sad that I can go to both my local TRUs and remember where each respective aisle was?

I loved those ads on Nickelodeon of kids winning some contest that was never held going through one of those TRU shopping sprees. They always went for the video games, and I never know why they always got duplicates.

Chestnuts roasted by Invader Norbert @ 04/07/2008 10:59 PM


SamAel i’m a tempermental loner too. That explains why i’ve always liked Raph the best now thatI think about it.

Chestnuts roasted by ULTRAMAN @ 04/07/2008 11:00 PM


See the toy store of my youth was Child World.

I even have the promo video they did in 1990. The video toy chest.

Chestnuts roasted by Cat the Vampire Slayer @ 04/07/2008 11:24 PM


Though I never missed the cartoon and saw the first movie twice times in the theater, I never had any TMNT toys. My cousin, who was then about four or five, was crazy about them. When he outgrew the toys in the mid-90s, he passed them onto my kid brother, despite the fact that the Turtles craze was long gone by then. I distinctly recall that the toys included the van, several turtles, Shredder, and the sewer hide-out. The toys were so battered and used by then, my mother kept them outside. Constant exposure to the elements and the sea air of the southern Jersey Shore assured that they did not stick around long enough for the turn of the millennium. They did make my brother a Turtles fan for life, though. He watches the new show as much as we did the old one, and he still has our old tapes of the original films. (And Raphael remains my favorite Turtle to this day. Tough and funny are a wonderful combination.)

Speaking of my brother, he had a Nerfoop for years. He used to challenge me to a game whenever I’d come home from college, and later whenever I’d visit from Wildwood. I’ll have to remember to ask him if he kept it after he and my folks moved in January.

To be honest, I’m not exactly sure what I’d buy with a $100 for Toys R’ Us. Maybe a lot of stuffed Care Bears and discounted doll clothes for my Sailor Moon dolls. I didn’t see the inside of a Toys ‘R Us until college – the closest one to Cape May is 45 minutes away in Hamilton, near Atlantic City.

Chestnuts roasted by starwenn @ 04/07/2008 11:28 PM


Yeah, when I was a kid, Mikey was the way to go, but I’m with you Annette, I like Donatello a lot more now. I was at a skating ring recently and they actually had the original Ninja Turtles arcade game there. It might still be my all-time favorite arcade game. I was trying to play as Donatello, but accidently hit the wrong button and ended up with Ralphael. Funny, cause he’s always been my least favorite, even now. And I too, am a tempermental loner.

Yeah, and those Toys “R” Us contests were weird, cause the kid would just run around the store like crazy, throwing crap into his buggy all willy-nilly, not seeming to pay any attention to what he got. Man, I would so formulate some kind of game plan before I went in there if that was me. I’d head straight to the video games, then to Transformers, then who knows….but there would be some kind of plan for sure.

Chestnuts roasted by DJ D @ 04/07/2008 11:31 PM


Awesome. I, too, miss the days of the old TRU, where they had huge isles and to get a video game you had to take a paper slip to that room hidden in the front corner of the other side of the store…. well, that’s how mine was >.>

Wow. Ten cents. And that’s not even the cheapest thing? Can’t wait to see that.

And surely you didn’t miss the big Speed Racer display they probably have now, eh? >.>

Chestnuts roasted by Duskull @ 04/07/2008 11:32 PM


I ALWAYS wanted to win these contests on Nickelodeon (well either this or get to play on Bozo’s grand prize game)…

My gf and I talked about how we would have raided the video game aisles during the shopping sprees.

So in 2006 for Christmas I went to the Mall and bought her $500 in gift cards to 20 of her favorite stores and bought a little metal shopping cart and wrapped it up. In the cart, aside from the cards was a set of rules that she had to use the cards up completely in one trip to the mall like a real shopping spree.

I got her cards to SBarro (so she could eat), Hot Topic, NY & Co., Steve & Barry’s, Victoria’s Secret, Gamestop, Old Navy, Bath & Bodyworks, Yankee Candle, etc, etc….

It took her 6 hours at the Mall but she used every card. And her expression when she opened the present… hands shaking, biggest smile ever… was worth it.

I’m telling you the shopping spree idea is awesome.

Rp

Chestnuts roasted by MessiahRp @ 04/07/2008 11:36 PM


Oh man, I wish someone would give me a $500 gift card shopping spree like that. That would be epic and amazing.

Chestnuts roasted by Annette @ 04/07/2008 11:43 PM


Matt – just another request for some Iron Man goodness. I’m in search for a 7/11 near my locale and hope to find some of the cups before they disappear.

Anyone know if they’re planning on Iron Man cereal? I’m always a sucker for the comic themed cereals.

Oh, and Stan Lee says Iron Man will be the best Marvel movie yet.

Chestnuts roasted by jjwspider @ 04/07/2008 11:51 PM


Matt – avoid Digimon at all costs! While I enjoy Pokemon, Digimon was the soul-less wanna be that killed Spider-Man Unlimited and Xyber 9 with it’s near domination of the Fox Kids Saturday morning block. The dribble that came from that show still angers me and annoys me to this very day!

Chestnuts roasted by jjwspider @ 04/07/2008 11:54 PM


Tomagotchis were the shit! The original Digimon were cool too, except my 4th grade teacher picked mine and Jason’s up (the friend I tried whoring out on Brawl since he has no Wii buddies and I don’t own it) after we battled in the middle of the classroom.

Anyway, I would like to know what cost less than $.10. Great entry, Matt!

Chestnuts roasted by Ben @ 04/08/2008 12:01 AM


When I was little I actually won a $100 gift certificate to Toys R Us at one of my mom’s company picnic things. I got a lot of little crap that I can’t recall now, with the exception of one of those cool stuffed animals that you could take in the bathtub with you. Those rocked.

Chestnuts roasted by Eddie Lightning Frog @ 04/08/2008 12:04 AM


I don’t think I would have been bored by more of the fossil stuff. Though I would like to see it all out of the package. Kinda weird though, that you can buy fossils.

Chestnuts roasted by kb @ 04/08/2008 12:05 AM


This makes me so sad that I have only ever been to TRU once in my life (because I won a gift card).

Also, I would not be at all disappointed at getting a Star Wars wheel for Halloween…it would join the ranks of pretty much everything else I love–filed under “crappy but awesome.’

Chestnuts roasted by Vanilla Fire @ 04/08/2008 12:11 AM


DJD The toy you were referring to is called Presto Magics by Ban Presto. I used to LOVE those things! And I happened across a blog one day where the guy was talking about how he WON the SUper Toy Run when he was a kid….let me see if i can find it again.

I’m kinda buzzed right now…I just drove a few feet down the street to 7-11 and got an iron man slurpee…its good but it has that icky red bull after taste….ick.

I dont feel soooo hot i feel eating sdhit beer meat bals

Chestnuts roasted by mandy_30th bday countdown:7 days_Reeves @ 04/08/2008 12:13 AM


By the way, my favorite Turtle was Michelangelo. Not one Leonardo, although some of my fraternity brothers would beg to differ.

Oh and this: Geoffrey Money. Discuss.

Chestnuts roasted by Invader Norbert @ 04/08/2008 12:18 AM


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