X-Entertainment.com X-Entertainment.com A Proud UGO Affiliate
X-Entertainment loves Christmas and will not stop talking about it, ever.

Halloween Countdown ’08: Play-Doh Party Kit!

Toys "R" Us is in Halloween mode, but as has been the norm for several years, their attempt is a little halfhearted. I guess there's no sense for them to try to compete with the ever-growing number of dedicated Halloween costume shops that arrive in September and explode come November, but I'm always disappointed when I see TRU's array of costumes and novelties limited to two sad mini-aisles.

When I was a kid, TRU was the definitive spot for all things Halloween, from costumes to colored hair spray, treat buckets, stupid reflective stickers and beyond. Our local TRU used to turn its entire entrance zone into a gigantic Halloween section, with the costume selection starting at the floor and making its way up to the ceiling on dangerously rendered fences. Shopping there was pure, glorious pandemonium, with parents and children alike using all body parts that could double as blunt instruments to push, shove and fight their way to the most desirable Don Post masks.

The Toys "R" Us Halloween section of today is just there to help them keep up appearances. Only kids who are excessively young and/or really don't give a shit about what they dress up as for Halloween would find shopping for a costume there acceptable.

I still go hunting for Countdown fodder at TRU every year, never expecting much and never finding much. Traditions are traditions. But! Perhaps sensing my impending annihilation of his store chain with the written (typed?) word, Geoffrey the Giraffe slipped me one item that was totally reviewable -- and something I haven't found at the many other stores I loiter in at this time of year. I take it back, TRU. You're aces, and so is this:

I first thought that this Play-Doh "Halloween Party Kit" would end up being one of those things with a really cool box and really boring contents, but I was so insanely wrong that I feel I deserve some length of jail time. Play-Doh always tosses out one or two simplistic Halloween-themed doodads each year, but this kit is way more inspired than their typical efforts. Only catch is, you need to pretend that you're five-years-old to enjoy it.

Companies use the term "party kit" pretty loosely, but this was clearly a labor of love for someone at Hasbro. Whoever devised this kit really thought about how Play-Doh could become the central theme of a Halloween party, and while I admit that it wouldn't be the party to end all parties, there are certainly enough ideas and goodies here to keep your guests occupied for, oh, seven or eight minutes. Again, assuming they're okay with pretending that they're five-year-olds.

For eight bucks, you get everything shown above. Eight small tubs of Play-Doh, four plastic knives, four Halloween playmats and four INCREDIBLE display domes. I CANNOT WAIT to tell you about the display domes, but they're way too good to blow my wad on just yet. You be patient over there.

The most endearing item in the kit is the "Halloween Party Guide," a pamphlet detailing how to decorate for your party, what kind of food to serve, ideas for activities, and unbiased suggestions that you offer random Play-Doh items as prizes for Halloween games. This pamphlet may prove to be a kid's first exposure to the type of overpassionate verbiage found in the many Family Circle Halloween editions I go through like grapes, and that warms my heart faster than the sun growing a big, fiery leg and stepping on me. If you think eight bucks is too much to spend on a big clump of Play-Doh and some plastic knives, trust me, this pamphlet makes up the difference.

You get four different playmats, each with a different spooky scene. The playmats feature tutorials on how to make monsters and mayhem out of Play-Doh, but it seems a bit wrong to have something as open-canvassy as Play-Doh just to build whatever some stupid playmat tells you to.

Hypocritically, I do enjoy one aspect of the playmats. They leave specific portions of the spooky scenes blank, so you can fill in the rest with Play-Doh pieces. The ghost eyes and mouths shown above aren't part of the art, but rather, they're flattened black Play-Doh balls of my own creation. Since the four mats feature different scenes and step-by-step how-to guides, we're encouraged to swap mats with our playmates every now and again to mix and match the fun.

And now you can forget everything you just read, because the real reason I'm writing about this kit is pictured above. DOMES! Sweet, heavenly, GLORIOUS domes! I have no right to love anything as much as I love...these...DOMES!

Domes!!!

So, the domes. To be used as display cases for your Play-Doh creations, I at first thought that the inclusion of THESE DOMES was wonderful -- but a little weird. Only after reading that party guide pamphlet did I understand their purpose. Since this kit is technically supposed to drive a Halloween party, THE DOMES will let your guests take their works of art home without risking the usual perils that await Play-Doh masterpieces in transit. Genius!

Course, since I'm pretty unlikely to throw a Halloween party focused on Play-Doh, I'm free to claim all of THE DOMES as my own. I like to consider them "specimen tanks," to safely contain the myriad Play-Doh creatures I find on distant planets. Two such creatures are shown above, but only the green slime monster in the foreground understands how much it sucks to spend life in a cheap specimen tank. The yarmulke-donning snowman alien is just happy to be alive.

I love these domes! Finally, a proper way to preserve our Play-Doh opuses forever and ever!

I don't know if Play-Doh's "Halloween Party Kit" would've been worth writing about if it didn't come with domes, but since I did, here I am. And now I'm leaving. To check on my domes! DOMES!

PS: I feel bad for starting this review off with ill notions about Toys "R" Us, for they have provided me with the true meaning of life: Play-Doh domes. As penance, let us revisit this old Halloween Countdown entry. Sorry, Geoffrey. You're my long-necked savior.

Posted by Matt on 09/24/2008. E-mail me!



Discussion Thread: 127 comments

That is some great play doh sculpting Matt. Great picture of the domes too. I bet it was a pain in the ass to have the right balance of light and the domes not giving off too much glare. Someone needs to appreciate that around here. Not just the person that took them. I never got to play with play doh as a kid because when I was interested my Grandma was terrified of it getting into the carpet and what not then when I was old enough to know better then to smash it into the carpet I wasn’t interested anymore. My oldest sister got a Mickey Mouse on a farm kit from roseart or some company like that when she was a lot older. Like at least 13. She played with it on occasion and then never did.

She also had something else I couldn’t play with because it had a lot of little pieces to it. The different pieces were kept in different little ziploc bags. They were to make pictures. They came with these white boards that had little holes lined up like a grid and you had these pieces that were different colors like green, black, red, yellow, orange, etc. with patterns that you pushed the little teeth into the holes. They were triangles, circles, squares etc. The patterns you followed, like a guide. Like flowers, human faces, race cars, etc. I inherited that later. We never knew what it was called and it didn’t have a brand name on it. I just thought I would mention it. I’ll probably be back later! I always come back. I am like a sinus infection har har har :)

Chestnuts roasted by Goob @ 09/24/2008 6:08 AM


Fantastic work! Every year I throw a big Horror Movie-thon/costume party. I think a few boxes of this awesome party activity will find their way into the fold this year. If the movies get too scary, people can work it out on the Doh.

Chestnuts roasted by Pepe @ 09/24/2008 6:16 AM


Too early…be back later.

Chestnuts roasted by meepy @ 09/24/2008 6:46 AM


Goob – Sounds like Lite-Brite.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lite-Brite

Chestnuts roasted by Nigel S Chaos, Esquire @ 09/24/2008 7:10 AM


Sometimes you can buy just a dome with a small amount of Play-Doh for like $1.99.

Chestnuts roasted by Kid Nicky @ 09/24/2008 7:36 AM


Neato ^_^ I thought those were snowglobes actually :P

Chestnuts roasted by Philly @ 09/24/2008 7:55 AM


yep yep yep…thought I would check in during my daily job search…so badly do I want to go to a Halloween store, but the stench of latex makes my nose burn really bad and screws with my sinuses, which is the last thing I need at this point

Chestnuts roasted by mandy_moldy dettached retina's_Reeves @ 09/24/2008 7:58 AM


don’t wanna be a Debbie Downer, so I will post something positive too….I think I may get that Play doh kit for my niece and nephew and have some quality bonding time. Kate being 3 and Andy being 5 in november, I think they will enjoy it.

Chestnuts roasted by mandy_moldy dettached retina\'s_Reeves @ 09/24/2008 8:00 AM


Matt, you’re off to a staggeringly blistering pace with the Halloween Countdown and I hope that you can keep it up. You seem to be in some sort of unprecedented zone so it seems that you’ll have no problem…

I hated when different play-doh colors melded together to make hybrids; the new colors were never as brilliant as the original. In fact, I remember being somewhat OCD about this. If there was, say, one particle of yellow mixed in with blue when I was putting the play-doh back in their tubs I would meticulously pick it off and put it back in its corresponding tub. Play-doh also lost some of its magic when it became less shiny and softer as time went on…

Also, the kid on the box is a terrible vampire. He doesn’t even have fangs or even makeup.

Chestnuts roasted by Clockwork @ 09/24/2008 8:08 AM


GM all. Heck i wish i had those at my desk at work it would make the bordom go away.

Chestnuts roasted by Issac @ 09/24/2008 8:12 AM


Wow…I really can’t keep up with all of the posts. And for some reason I’ve been cracking up at these posts. I think Matt’s found his happy place! YAY!

Chestnuts roasted by gingela5 @ 09/24/2008 9:14 AM


Goob, I think you’re referring to the good ol’ Lite Brite. That thing was awesome.

Chestnuts roasted by Invader Norbert @ 09/24/2008 9:21 AM


Play Doh never lasted too long around me, since I always ended up eating it. Eventually my folks stopped buying it for me at all. As far back as I can remember I had an unhealthy obsession with chewing on, and eating, modeling clay, play doh, and glue sticks. I don’t do it anymore, but I also don’t dare tempt fate with this wonderful, fantastic Halloween Party Kit!!!

Chestnuts roasted by The Boogeyman @ 09/24/2008 9:31 AM


this play doh kit looks like too much fun. honestly i agree with you on the domes. those are great. i think you could even strecth their use outside of displaying play doh creations.

Chestnuts roasted by nosna @ 09/24/2008 9:43 AM


I always loved the smell of Play-Do. I used to have every stupid Play-Do related thing they made. I miss those days.

Chestnuts roasted by DC @ 09/24/2008 9:44 AM


“… if it’s new and hot, it’s a toy they’ve got and the prices are hard to beat (oh neat!). Hey, toy r us kids did you hear the great news? I wanna be a toys r us kid (more game, more toys, oh boy!!) I wanna be a toys r us kid!”

Chestnuts roasted by Nizzler @ 09/24/2008 9:47 AM


Goob – Look for Halsam Play Tiles on Ebay. I think this is what you are talking about, or some version of it. I had a set of these in the 70′s that was handed down from my brother and they were great. This was a favorite when I had to stay home from school because I was sick and I could play with them for hours!

Chestnuts roasted by Saint @ 09/24/2008 9:54 AM


Dammit. Now I want a Play-Doh Party Kit.
I totally understand your fascination with those domes, Matt. I really want one!

Chestnuts roasted by Denise @ 09/24/2008 10:14 AM


A simpler explanation would have been that it was like a Lite Brite, only with different shapes.

I always loved Play-doh…never had enough of it. Never had enough lego either.

Chestnuts roasted by meepy @ 09/24/2008 10:18 AM


Way to spell “yarmulke” wrong. Isn’t Waiterbot Jewish?

Chestnuts roasted by Whatever @ 09/24/2008 10:38 AM


Wow, that was pretty butchered, wasn’t it? And no, Waiterbot isn’t Jewish. Kuse is. Which makes Box half-Jewish, which is sort of odd for someone birthed from an advent calendar.

Chestnuts roasted by Matt @ 09/24/2008 10:46 AM


Looks like I am headed to TRU on my lunch break…lol

Chestnuts roasted by slick316 @ 09/24/2008 10:47 AM


Since the snowman is wearing a yamaka, can you have Chanauka Harry wear a Dracula cape? :)

Anyway, Pizza-flavored Doritos taste ALOT like those old Pizzaria chips. Yum!

Chestnuts roasted by JLAJRC @ 09/24/2008 10:53 AM


I haven’t stepped into a Toys R Us in a long time, but now that I have a kid, I wandered into one a couple of months ago, and I was shocked at how far downhill they’ve gone.

The Dark Knight was all the rage, so I was interested in seeing the associated toys. TRU had pathetically little shelf space devoted to Batman, and even less so for the actualy movie merchandise. It’s sad to say that Target blew TRU out of the water in this regard, when TRU is supposedly a store that ONLY SELLS TOYS.

Even my 2 year-old daughter was less than thrilled with TRU and wanted to leave after just a few minutes. Oh, how the mighty have fallen.

Chestnuts roasted by tanta07 @ 09/24/2008 10:54 AM


Great Dome Sculptures Matt, I hope that they find their way into the Advent Calendar this year!

Chestnuts roasted by Gregor @ 09/24/2008 10:59 AM


Add A New Comment!