Video Challenger: Difference between revisions

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[[Image:VideoChallenger.jpg|right|thumb|Half as fun as {{w|Lazer Tag}}!]]
[[Image:VideoChallenger.jpg|right|thumb|Half as fun as {{w|Lazer Tag}}!]]
[[Image:VCCanada.jpg|right|thumb|Canadian packaging]]
[[Image:VCCanada.jpg|right|thumb|Canadian packaging]]
[[Image:GalvyChallenger.gif|right|thumb|250px|Seizure Time!]]
[[Image:GalvyChallenger.gif|right|thumb|250px|Seizure warning!]]
'''Video Challenger''' ({{w|lang=ja|ビデオチャレンジャー|ビデオチャレンジャー}}) is an interactive television toy created by Select Merchandise and distributed in Japan in 1987 by [[TakaraTomy|Takara]].  Toy-Television interaction was supposed to be the next big thing in [[To sell toys|toy marketing]] and Mattel had a similar TV-Toy in North America at the same time called ''{{w|Captain Power and the Soldiers of the Future#Action figures and interactive game|Captain Power}}''.
'''Video Challenger''' ({{w|lang=ja|ビデオチャレンジャー|ビデオチャレンジャー}}) is an interactive television toy created by Select Merchandise and distributed in Japan in 1987 by [[TakaraTomy|Takara]].  Toy-Television interaction was supposed to be the next big thing in [[To sell toys|toy marketing]] and Mattel had a similar TV-Toy in North America at the same time called ''{{w|Captain Power and the Soldiers of the Future#Action figures and interactive game|Captain Power}}''.



Revision as of 03:49, 6 June 2021

Half as fun as Lazer Tag!
Canadian packaging
Seizure warning!

Video Challenger (ビデオチャレンジャー) is an interactive television toy created by Select Merchandise and distributed in Japan in 1987 by Takara. Toy-Television interaction was supposed to be the next big thing in toy marketing and Mattel had a similar TV-Toy in North America at the same time called Captain Power.

The toy consisted of a light gun called the Challenge Blaster that responded to signals from the television playing a VHS tape. The more the player fired at appropriate targets on the screen, the more points the Challenge Blaster would rack up. The more times the sensor on the toy got "hit," the more points the gun would lose. Since the "game" was only a VHS tape, the missions played out the same way all the time.

The toy was cross-marketed into the anime The Headmasters in which children could fire at the Decepticons in the title sequence (starting with "Explosion on Mars!! Maximus Is in Danger") and score points in selected episodes. Daniel himself carries a Challenge Blaster in the anime and is sometimes seen playing the game.

Video Challenger was sold in Canada by Irwin Toy and in the United Kingdom by Bandai.

Software

Unreleased

These games were planned, but it isn't clear if they were ever released anywhere in the world or not.