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Which Toys Came Out on Top?

The National Toy Hall of Fame in the United States has chosen to honor three toys.  

The exterior of the Strong Museum of Play shows a giant Trivial Pursuit gamepiece and giant Scrabble tiles spelling out PLAY in front of the building.

Courtesy of The Strong Museum of Play

The Strong Museum of Play, home of the National Toy Hall of Fame, celebrates the history of play. There’s also a skyline climb, a butterfly garden, and a video game hall of fame.

Slime is getting its time in the spotlight! The gooey stuff, which has entertained generations of kids, is now part of America’s National Toy Hall of Fame, along with the board games Trivial Pursuit and Battleship.

Each year, the National Toy Hall of Fame in Rochester, New York, honors toys that encourage creative play and have lasting popularity. Anyone can nominate a toy for the Hall of Fame by going to its website. Winners are selected by a panel of experts as well as an online voting system that’s open to the public.

The packaging and components of Trivial Pursuit, Battleship, and slime are displayed.

Courtesy of The Strong Museum of Play

The games Trivial Pursuit (left) and Battleship (right) and the longtime favorite, slime, are now in the National Toy Hall of Fame.

This year’s winners are classics. Battleship players try to sink each other’s ships, while Trivial Pursuit challenges players to answer questions about categories like history and sports. Slime is just slime. The sticky stuff was first sold as a toy in 1976, but kids were probably having fun with homemade slime before that. Michelle Parnett-Dwyer of the National Toy Hall of Fame says that while slime may seem simple for a toy, it’s actually quite valuable.

“Though slime continues to carry icky [connections] to slugs and swamps—all part of the fun for some—the toy offers meaningful play,” Parnett-Dwyer said on the Hall of Fame’s website.

Toys that were nominated for the Hall of Fame but didn’t make the cut include Connect Four, Spirograph, the Star Wars lightsaber, and Tickle Me Elmo.

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Fun Fact

LEGO, the maker of plastic brick toys, is the world’s largest tire manufacturer! The company makes hundreds of millions of tiny tires for its building kits every year.

A LEGO mechanic figure is posed in front of a LEGO car holding a wrench as if it is about to put a tire onto the car.

© Ekaterina79—iStock/Getty Images

Slime’s Story Stretches Way Back

A child’s hands stretch some green slime.

© Olga Aleksandrova/Alamy

It seems like slime will never go out of style, and it’s no wonder. Stretchy, endlessly moldable, and just plain gross, slime can provide hours of fun. If you’ve ever observed a slug creeping across a rock, you may know that slime occurs in nature. (Notice what the slug leaves behind.) But who came up with the idea to sell slime as a toy? 

Slime’s history as a plaything began in 1966, when a company called Wham-O introduced Super Stuff. Pink and gooey, Super Stuff was similar to the slime kids know and love today. But the popularity of toy slime didn’t really explode until 1976, when Mattel began selling Slime. 

Maybe it was the name or the gross green color, but Slime was an immediate hit. Hoping to compete with Mattel, other toy makers started selling slime as well. Soon, there was slime all over toy store shelves (safely packaged, of course)!

Slime’s success goes so far back that many of the adults in your family may have played with it when they were growing up.

You can make your own slime! All you need is glue, baking soda, contact lens solution, and permission from an adult. Add food color and glitter to make it fancy.

Big-Time Slime Makers

© paolo/stock.adobe.com

Check out that trail of slime!

Land snails and slugs make slime! The stretchy stuff oozes out of the animal’s body, helping it move along the ground. Snails and slugs also secrete slime when they feel threatened because a slime-covered animal is a less tempting meal than a drier one.

You can read more about snails and slugs at Britannica!

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Word of the Day

exude

Part of speech:

verb

Definition:

: to produce a liquid or smell that flows out slowly

Definitions provided by
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