"RUNNN IT'S NUNZILLAAAAAAAA!!!!!!!!!!!!"Anarchemitis said:That strikes terror into my heart.Gotham Soul said:![]()
I miss it already.
QFTthe monopoly guy said:But anybody that tells me that Bionicle, or any of the new themes (like exofighters, or whatever) are LEGOS, is wrong.
Oh man I did so much damage to myself as a kid by playing "superhero" and launching from trampoline to poolhypothetical fact said:The original trampoline, sure it caused numerous injuries to everyone that used it but it was fun. Now days we have these padded, springless, caged in things that offer nowhere near the bounce; and you can't even jump off one into the pool.
I wish they still sold those gundam model kits in retail stores, those things were fun to build.qbert4ever said:Sucked away most of my childhood. Combine them with Star Wars Lego sets? Bliss.![]()
Along with
![]()
LMAO! "...and a list of Hollywood actresses who need a shmack in their shmart mouths..."Aardvark said:Toys Colonel Gentleman wishes he had when he was a lad, but they weren't invented yet:
Micronauts
Scooby-Doo monster game
Which Witch
ATAT Imperial Walker
Stay Alive, the survival game!
I remember those! They were sweet. There were these other ones that were similar, I don't know if they were the same brand or not, but they were like monsters. There was this one guy I had who wore a hooded cloak, and they had holograms too (it was kind of a fad back then, I think)Jaythulhu said:it was a bunch of knights and smaller dudes in cloaks, and their chests/heads were a hologram that switched between a person and an animal.
Nice, maybe I can dig it up on youtube or something. Thanks!Jaythulhu said:Can't remember the name of the game ya mentioned, ThaBenMan, but I saw it being reviewed on an episode of attack of the show a while back.
Holy crap, me too.stompy said:Didn't play with many toys in my day and age... I had a few Bionicals and the such, but I primarily used Blu-tac to model. It was weird; instead of the regular play-dough, I used the regular ol' Blu-tac, which I found was a lot stickier than its entertainment-purposed counterpart.