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Old School Gems. The 1980s were a time of big hair, neon colors, and bold choices, and filled with everyday items that, looking back, have taken on a new life as cherished relics.
As one of the first home video game systems, the Atari 2600 console revolutionized gaming by introducing beloved games like Frogger and Pac-Man. Launched in 1977, a well-preserved console with ...
The ’60s had the counterculture. Ten years later, rebellion was a little sillier. Sold like baseball cards, Wacky Packs applied gross-out humor to parodies of consumer products, as in Gulp Oil ...
Sold for: $4,500 Imagine being a parent during the 1960s. You buy this lunchbox and matching Thermos for your kid. They disrespect it, dropping it on the cafeteria floor, scuffing it every other ...
Prior to 1977, toys were released together with films as merchandising tie-ins.Films that were suitably toyetic spawned numerous licensed properties, often marketed heavily to children.
First things first, just about every household in the ‘80s had a shelf full of board games. But there was one common denominator you could find on nearly every one of those shelves: Trivial Pursuit.
Disco, denim, bell bottoms, flower power, funk and decades of fabulous music. The 1970s: What a time to be alive. For those growing up in that era, life was all about being young and wild and free.
“Vintage arcades from the '80s and '90s were art installations themselves,” says James Deighan, founder of gaming agency Mega Cat Studios. “You can’t help but look at the side of an Atari ...