The 1980s were the best decade for kids' toys, and I'm not just saying that because I grew up during them. For the first time, toy companies weren't content to just sell kids' toys with ads in magazines. It wasn't enough for kids to be playing with toys outside or in the living room. Kids had to live and breathe the toys they were buying. They had to dream about them, draw them, write stories about them, and, most importantly, talk to their friends about them. Companies like Hasbro, Kenner, and Playmates spent crazy amounts of money on a new strategy for selling toys to kids: brand synergy.

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Now toys were being sold to kids not just in between the shows on tv- the shows themselves were designed to sell toys! So was the cereal the kids were eating while they watched, the pajamas they wore while they watched, and even the vitamins they ate to counteract the damage they did to their bodies while they did those things. The thing is: we ate it all up! We loved that the same characters we saw in movies were now on our tv screens and in our hands. Here are some of the most successful (and most often forgotten) attempts to get your money.

Updated on December 21, 2022, by Gabrielle Huston: Are you reminiscing about some of the toys of the past as we transition into the new year? We've updated this list for you to give these toys the platform they deserve!

23 Poor Man's Transformers

via traceandtrev on Etsy

I'm not blowing any minds by saying that Transformers was a big deal in the 1980s. Hasbro's Robots in Disguise toy-and-cartoon juggernaut was making all the money. Former kings of toys for boys Tonka, seeing their oversized dump trucks weren't flying off the shelves anymore, did the sensible thing and made those trucks into robots.

Gobots were what you got for your birthday from well-meaning family members who knew you wanted "One of those transforming robot toys." Ironically, Hasbro bought the line out in 1991 and worked the Gobots lore into an alternate Transformers timeline.

22 So Many Bad He-Man Figures

via midnight-rant.blogspot.com

We've already done a whole article about bad He-Man toys. There are so many! Like Ram Man, who, to his credit, is pretty clear about what he's into. You can't even move his arms and legs so as not to mess up his aerodynamics.

There are also classics like Sssqueeze, who leaves no doubt in your mind that he is a Snakeman, and Snout Spout who looks like someone tried to cosplay as Flame Mammoth from Mega Man X and gave up after the head.

21 OG Transformers

via Toys are Russ on YouTube

The merchandising juggernaut of the 80s and 90s needs no introduction, having been a part of pop culture since its creation 30+ years ago. While originally marketed as The Transformers across toys, cartoons, and comic books, fans started calling the original "roll out" (sorry) of Transformers by the now-familiar "Generation 1" moniker once the franchise started to get more and more complicated, leading Hasbro to adopt the term officially.

The original idea came from, of course, Japan, where giant robots or "mecha" had been a staple of entertainment for decades. Hasbro bought a number of different mecha toy lines and resold them all in the West under the Transformers label.

20 Indentured Animal Babies

via MidThePinesVintage on Etsy

Another toy phenomenon that is inexplicable today: Cabbage Patch Kids straddled the line between dolls and toys and it seemed like every kid you knew had one. What you may not remember are these spin-off dolls, called "Koosas" (for whatever reason).

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Koosas were supposed to be pets for the Cabbage Patch Kids, though they clearly just used the same bodies and head sculpts but added cat ears. They are also, in the rich lore of Cabbage Patch Kids, fully sentient, which is pretty dark, and even Google tags them as "animal babies."

19 Irresponsible Pet Owner Simulator

via u/n0ughtzer0 on Reddit

"Puppy Surprise:" Every kid's dream, every parent's nightmare. While the idea that your cute dog could just randomly get fat and then one day spawn half a dozen cuter, tinier versions of itself are incredibly exciting for a kid. As an adult, all we can see is bills and torn-up couches. Where did you all come from?!

Part of the pregnancy craze of the 90s (check out this list to learn about Pregnant Barbie), Puppy Surprise is a stuffed toy featuring a random number of tiny babies in it, because the best thing about having babies is not knowing how many there are in there.

18 Your First Car

via Amazon

A common sight on lawns both urban and sub, the Little Tykes Cozy Coupe is immediately recognizable for its bulbous shape and yellow-on-red color scheme. The Coupe grew up with you, from a comfy way to roam around your yard as a kid, to a roll-cage equipped stunt machine perfect for launching over ramps.

While modern versions have given the thing eyes for some reason, the design has stayed mostly consistent for decades. The coupe is so beloved that it has even been made into actual, road-safe cars for adults who just can't let go of that sense of independence and adventure.

17 Fun For Five Minutes

I know what you're thinking: Etch-A-Sketch is one of the quintessential 80s toys, even being immortalized in Toy Story. Everyone had one or knew a kid who did, and they are staples of Kindergarten classrooms to this day.

But has anyone stopped to consider that they're terrible?

Trying to draw something with an Etch-A-Sketch is like trying to draw with one hand tied behind your back and the other hand severed at the elbow. These things are fun for the five seconds it takes to get over the initial joy of "When I turn the knob the line happens." Even if you do manage to make something worth looking at, the thing has such contempt for you that it self-destructs as soon as you put it down.

16 The Power(less) Glove

What needs to be said about the Nintendo Power Glove that isn't covered in this legendary clip from the 1989 Fred Savage movie/commercial The Wizard?

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The Power Glove is basically an NES controller strapped to a vinyl dishwashing glove that, while admittedly awesome in its 80s-ness, is a terrible video game controller. We can barely control games with hand gestures now, image how janky this was in 1989! A licensed Nintendo product, the Power Glove was actually manufactured by Mattel, who is going to show up on this list a lot.

15 Sandbox Warriors

Created in 1964 and credited for creating the term "action figure," since conventional wisdom believed that boys wouldn't play with dolls. The brand really came into its own in 1982, when Hasbro re-branded to Joes, not as a semi-accurate representation of real branches of the US Armed Forces, but as an elite fighting force battling the evil organization Cobra.

The 3 ¾" scale figures are what most of us probably think of when we think of "GI Joe." That or Channing Tatum. Much like Transformers, GI Joe was an absolute smash hit for Hasbro, as popular on television screens as on store shelves.

14 Creepy Android Bear

Teddy Ruxpin is one of the ultimate 80s toys for one big reason: it promised you the future. A teddy bear that not only talked, but it's mouth and eyes moved too! Did it read your stories out loud? You bet it did! Underneath the magic, however, Ruxpin held a diabolical secret. Like a cuddly Wizard of Oz.

You see, the magic of Ruxpin was all an illusion: the bear was powered by cassette tapes that you'd plug into its back. The thing was a huckster, pushing real friends onto kids who were none the wiser. Can you tell that we're still hurt by this betrayal?