By Carolyn Thompson, Associated Press,Irishexaminer.com
Copyright irishexaminer
The contenders include tabletop favourites Battleship, Catan, Connect Four, Spirograph and Trivial Pursuit, as well as crowd-pleasers such as scooters, slime, snow and cornhole.
The Star Wars lightsaber, Furby and Tickle Me Elmo are also among the finalists chosen from among the thousands of nominees the Toy Hall of Fame receives each year.
At the end of the day, the playful debates just go to show how much personal and cultural relevance these toys have for us all
“This year’s contenders present some playful match-ups,” said Christopher Bensch, vice president for collections and chief curator.
Along with board games and tactile materials like snow and slime, he said: “There’s also Tickle Me Elmo and Furby — two technological icons of the 90s toy world — battling it out.”
“I’m always excited to see where the judges and public come out in their votes,” Mr Bensch said. “At the end of the day, the playful debates just go to show how much personal and cultural relevance these toys have for us all.”
The public has until September 24 to vote for their favourites.
The three with the most votes will make up a “Player’s Choice” ballot to be counted alongside 22 other ballots from a panel of historians, educators and other experts.
The winners will be announced in November by The Strong National Museum of Play in Rochester, New York, where the hall offame is located.
While anyone can nominate a toy, the ones that make it into the hall have to be considered icons, have engaged multiple generations, fostered creativity, or profoundly changed play or toy design.
Last year, My Little Pony, Transformers action figures and the Phase 10 card game were honoured, bringing to 87 the number of toys inducted since the hall of fame was established in 1998.
Who is nominated this year?
— Battleship: Milton Bradley has sold more than 100 million copies of the strategy game since introducing its plastic warships and pegboard version in 1967.
— Catan: Known earlier as Settlers Of Catan, the game first published by Kosmos in Germany was one of the first German-style board games to achieve popularity outside Europe.
— Connect Four: Players drop discs into a grid in hopes of being the first to get four in a row. Spoiler alert – the game has been mathematically solved, meaning the first player can always win with the right moves.
— Cornhole challenges players to throw bean bags though a hole in a slanted wooden board to score points.
— Furby debuted in 1998 and within the first three years, 40 million of the drowsy-eyed robotic creatures were sold. An enhanced version was reintroduced to a new generation of kids in 2023.
— The scooter has provided riders with low-tech, two-wheeled transportation for generations, evolving along the way to incorporate lightweight materials and innovative technology.
— Slime, whether commercially produced or homemade, is on the list for its ability to encourage messy and experimental play.
— Snow is recognised for its versatility, allowing children and adults to make snowballs and sculpt the cold, wintry stuff into forts and figures, while also serving as a base for sledging, skiing and snowboarding. The nominee would join the ranks of other back-to-basic inductees like the stick, sand and cardboard box.
— Spirograph, with its plastic gears, rings, triangles and bars, has entertained and educated the masses for 60 years. Users place the tip of pen into a hole of a gear and rotate it around or within other gears to create intricate, geometric drawings.
— Kenner released the first Star Wars lightsaber in 1978 on the heels of the 1977 Star Wars movie. An arsenal has followed, with lights and sound, demonstrating the influence of popular culture on play.
— Tickle Me Elmo, with its contagious laughter, was the must-have toy of the 1996 holiday season. The Sesame Street character was not the first stuffed animal to get electronics, but the giggling Muppet took the concept to another level.
— Trivial Pursuit debuted more than 40 years ago with a challenging mix of trivia questions on geography, history, sports and other topics. More than 100 million copies were sold by 2023.