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  • Furby

    The fuzzy Furbish-talking owl!" It takes a special toy to be banned from the N.S.A. building in Maryland because the intelligence boys think it can record classified verbal information. And it takes a very special toy to be named Toy of the Year in 1998. But for the rotund, gremlin-eared, giant-eyed Furby, both were easier done than said—and that’s just because Furby’s English wasn’t so great, at least not at first. But more on that later.
    To compete with archrival Mattel, the toy company Hasbro embarked on a tech-toy odyssey. Given their success with the Giga Pets line in 1997, Tiger Electronics were the perfect find for the questing Hasbro. The toy giant bought Tiger in early ’98, and the virtual-pet Furbies, which the company had only just completed work on, were ready to hit the toy store shelves in time for Christmas.
    Furby was a plush, animatronic little miracle. Each was only five inches tall, but he was packed with electronic gadgetry that allowed him to interact with the environment through sight, touch, sound and physical orientation. It danced, sang, slept, wiggled its ears, blinked its eyes, and best of all, moved its mouth and actually talked. His native tongue was the fantasy language Furbish, but like any immigrant, he would gradually learn the language of his new homeland.
    Combined, Furby had a vocabulary of nearly 200 Furbish and English words, and with those, could speak up to 800 phrases. Upon putting his batteries in, the first thing Furby did was tell you his name in Furbish. When he woke up, he might chirp "Dah/o-loh/u-tye,” which means “sun up,” in case you’re not yet handy with the Furbish dictionary that came with each of the six creatures.
    Furby reacted to pats on the head, backstrokes, tummy tickles, and rotations that brought him upside down. Cover his eyes and you might get a “no light!” or a “boo a-hoh”—the Furbish equivalent. But when you covered his eyes the next time, you might get something entirely different, because Furby was programmed not to respond the same way to his stimuli every time. About the worst you’d hear from your little guy was that he was bored, and of course the best was that he loved you. Dote on him like you should, and you were sure to get the latter.
    If all of this wasn’t enough for you, Furbies were also interactive. One Furby could tell when another was nearby, and they were able to communicate with each other via infrared signals, even teaching each other tricks and songs. After they took America by storm, they were issued in Japan with Furbish/Japanese language skills.
    Furbies weren’t quite as high maintenance as a flesh-and-blood pet, though they were a whole lot needier than a regular plush. But you gotta give love to get it. And yes, there’s a Furbish equivalent to that too—it’s just very hard to write phonetically.
    Release History of Toy

    1998 - Furby
    Sub Categories of Toys

    electronic toys
    plush Toy and Game Manufacturer

    Tiger Electronics, Hasbro
    1997


    Best Years Of My Childhood Was Growing Up In The Late 90's and the early 2000's . before the world went Mad

  • #2
    Re: Furby

    I remember Christmas 1998 when Furbys were the hot item. One morning I went to Toys R Us in search of Hot Wheels. There was a long line of people camped out there for the Furbys. Since I wasn't really looking for one they let us in before the Furby mob for some strange reason. So I headed for the diecast model aisle and then when I was leaving (they still hadn't let the Furby line in yet) I saw one sitting on the counter so I snagged it! I sold it to a friend of a friend on Christmas Eve for £50.

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    • #3
      Re: Furby

      I hated these things! I remember all the hype and people going silly at work wanting one. Why? I still don't understand! They are so creepy and annoying.
      1976 Vintage

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      • #4
        Re: Furby

        I was working weekends in the toystore as a teen when these came out. I never really understood the fuss. I'd actually like to get a few now and see if they really could do what they said they could do. I'm a bit of a tech head and I think that what they said they were capable of is a load of rubbish.

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        • #5
          Re: Furby

          I remember these being popular for a year or 2 at the end of the 1990s.


          They reminded me of some teddy bears in the 1980s that had a basic sound sampler inside.

          If you said something to one it would repeat it back, but slightly distorted. Putting 2 together would eventually create a sound like a fax machine dialing up.

          I remember reading about them a few years ago, I will see if I can find the site.
          The Trickster On The Roof

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          • #6
            Re: Furby

            Here's the link: http://www.agonybooth.com/agonizer/C...tion_1985.aspx
            The Trickster On The Roof

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            • #7
              Re: Furby

              I have just recently remembered the memory of owning one of these Giga Pets from around 1998, by seeing a picture on another Forum I frequent

              What memories it brings and the unusual crazes we had, as well memories of that era in and fun times in general too!

              80sChav

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              • #8
                Re: Furby

                There were a few electronic pets around at that time, Tamagotchis & those robot dogs (Abio?) come to mind.
                The Trickster On The Roof

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                • #9
                  Re: Furby

                  http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedi...by_picture.jpg

                  IFOUND THESE IMAGES.

                  THEY ARE SO NICE.

                  CANT BELIEVE THEY GOT BANNED I NEVER REMEMBER HEARING THEY GOT BANNED.

                  http://www.thetoyshop.com/medias?con...MzNjk0LmpwZ3wt

                  http://static.toysrus.co.uk//medias/...5013822494.jpg

                  http://furby-slovenia.com/assets/ima...ndex-furby.png
                  FOR THE HONOUR OF GRAYSKULL

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Re: Furby

                    I remember having one and yes, they were sooo cute, making all those sweet sounds.

                    I found this article about the reasons behind them being banned http://mentalfloss.com/article/55136...lly-ban-furbys but I think it is a load of ...

                    Anyhow, hasbro seems to be doing quite fine, given their financial recrods http://www.bizdb.co.uk/company/hasbr...ited-01981543/ and they have been releasing new furbys, much more digital ones http://www.hasbro.com/en-us/brands/furby

                    However, I don't think they will achieve the same success as with the old furbys, not necessarily becasue these ones are worse, but because the world has entered the era of computer games and normal toys are - unfortunately - less popular with children.

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