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More Vintage Star Wars Figures.

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  Following from one of my previous posts 'Vintage Star Wars Collectables'. I have looked at some of the vehicles that were a massive part of the original trilogy of film and have looked into how much those classic toys are worth. The toy makers who linked up with the original trilogy managed to bring a large amount of the ships and futuristic vehicle to an audience who could not get enough of the merchandise.  The Millennium Falcon... Upon a recent visit to an antique shop in the north east of England I came across one of the first Millennium Falcon toys without its box. Although the toy was in good condition, the seller wanted over £200( roughly $250) for the vintage toy. The Millennium Falcon was in a display box, so I could not check its true age and condition. The fact that it was not boxed was disappointing as some markets still sell the boxed version of the Millennium Falcon for a similar price. To find a mint condition vintage Millennium Falcon

Classic Computer Games- Sensible Soccer.

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Sensible Soccer was possibly one of the most addictive and playable football games of the 1990's. It was developed by Sensible Software, who were the same team that created the 'shoot em up' game Cannon Fodder. The Amiga Version of Sensible Soccer. Long before the rise of the Electronic Art's FIFA and the Pro Evolution series of games. Sensible Soccer was the computer game that most followers of football tended to play. The game was massive on the home computer market. It was a huge hit on PC, Amiga and the Atari systems. It was also released on the Nintendo and Sega consoles. The Game Boy version proved to be very popular as the simplicity of the controls worked well on a hand held device.  On the home computers, the game was often played using the joystick and it was a game that was incredibly easy to pick up. The game did not need detailed graphics or motion capturing. It was a bird's eye view kick about with the ability to customize teams to yo

Classic Video Games- Tetris

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  Addiction has a name and its name is Tetris. Vintage Classic Tetris. Tetris is a game that has been around for over three decades. It has spread from the hand held consoles of the mid 1990's into becoming a staple of everyone's mobile phones. The first version of the game surfaced in 1984. It was developed at a Russian Science Centre by Alexey Pajitnov and Vladimir Pokhilko. Alexey Pajitnov made very little money from the game as he signed over the rights to the product to the then Soviet Government for ten years. Tetris was one of the first computer exported to the USA from the Soviet Union. The game's aim is to sort the seven geometric shapes into perfect lines that will disappear and award you points. If the lines are broken, they remain where they are and stack up until they reach the cut off line that signifies the end of the game. It is estimated that over 50,000,000 physical units of the game have been sold across numerous game platform

Vintage Arcade Games: Operation Wolf

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Operation Wolf was an addictive retro journey through a hail of bullets and explosions!  Growing up, there was always an abundance of arcade games available to play.  Locally there was usually an arcade machine in the chip shop and there was at least two arcades in the city centre which had a small cult following. Trips to the seaside or beach always had that cold weather safety net of the amusements. So finding something to play on was never a big problem. There much to amuse us and we were lucky with the choices we had in our youth. There was the Street Fighter game series. Mortal Kombat had just appeared on the scene and the Teenage Mutant Hero Turtles arcade game offered an engrossing multi-player game experience. But the one arcade game that I made a beeline for was Operation Wolf. This shoot em up involved a mounted rifle with the ability to launch grenades at enemy fighters and mechanized threats such as helicopters. It was a single player game with enem

Classic Computer Games - Road Rash

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The trans-state motorcycle racing game Road Rash was very successful on the Sega Mega Drive and was a popular game across many other game systems.  This type of game has an endless appeal and the basic game style will appeal to most modern video gamers. I think that motorcycle enthusiasts and the " Grand Theft Auto " generation would still find a certain charm in its enduring content. With online competition and a gripping multi player mode, this would be a great hit with today's current players. In the second game of the series,  Road Rash 2  (which I personally preferred )The racing took place in through much of the United States. One of the major changes that I can recall from the original was that the races could only be won by placing first, second, or third in each race. ( In the first game, it would still allow you a placing by finishing in fourth). After all five tracks were won, the player would advance to the next level, where more money was at stake

Classic Arcade Game- Afterburner

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The vintage game Afterburner was a classic of the arcades in the late 1980's.  Although not directly tied into the movie Top Gun, it's likely that much of its success could be attributed to the wave of popularity and interest that occurred around the films release. Afterburner was a game that saw conversations to the home console and computer market. But at the time it was unable to recreate the full Afterburner experience. Partly due to inferior graphics present in the domestic machines and missing the gyroscope chair that was offered  to give the player the full 360 air combat experience. The game in the arcades was pretty much impossible to replicate properly yet software houses were unwilling to miss out on the lucrative market that the arcade machine opened up. The Arcade Version Screen Shot. Afterburner was released on several Sega consoles and from 1989 through to 2006, many versions of the game were released. Afterburner was available a

Classic Amiga and PC Games: Frontier Elite II

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If there was one computer game that defined my youth.. It was Frontier: Elite II. Frontier:Elite II was a vintage computer game written by David Braben and in my opinion, it was an excellent way to lose yourself for months if not years! Initially published by Gametek in 1993. It is the first sequel to the earlier game Elite. The Elite franchise was a series of games in which you traded and fought through the known universe. The game systems that it was initially available on were for the Commodore Amiga, the Atari ST and the PC home computers. I originally used to play the game on my trusty Amiga and even now, I have fond memories of the game. The game allowed you to choose whether or not to align yourself with the democratic Federation, the uncompromising Empire or to keep yourself independent of both of these galactic superpowers. If you sided with one you found the other power would take a dim view of your presence in their territory and from that poin