Play-Doh: Difference between revisions
From MediaWiki
Jump to navigationJump to search
It's not, but it is clearly the same substance. |
No edit summary |
||
| Line 24: | Line 24: | ||
:This kit is essentially the above ''Dark Of The Moon'' kit in new packaging. | :This kit is essentially the above ''Dark Of The Moon'' kit in new packaging. | ||
==Trivia== | |||
:Most of the time, the compound used in the WFC toys aren't very sticky or messy, so it shouldn't mess up your toy. | |||
==External links== | ==External links== | ||
Revision as of 20:06, 16 January 2022
Play-Doh is a name brand of multi-colored modeling compound. It was originally created in the 1930s by Noah McVicker of soap manufacturer Kutol Products as a wallpaper cleaner, but the product was re-branded as a craft item when McVicker's nephew Joe McVicker noted that school children were using it to make Christmas ornaments. In 1956 the pair formed the company Rainbow Crafts to market it, but a series of mergers and buy-outs led to the product being owned by Kenner, then Tonka, and then finally Hasbro.
Remember, Play-Doh is "Fun to play with, not to eat!"
Toys
War for Cybertron Trilogy

- Spoiler Pack (Leader Unboxing, 2020, 2021)
- Ultra Magnus (w/ Battlefield Rung)
- Nemesis Prime (w/ Giza and Fangtron)
- Megatron and Fossilizer Skelivore
- All three of the War for Cybertron Trilogy toylines' Netflix-branded Leader Class figures come with a substance referred to on the box as a "compound", however, anyone who has been in contact with Plah-Doh before will know by the smell and the texture that it really is just Play-Doh.
- Each of these figures feature hidden items within the included compound; Ultra Magnus and Nemesis Prime feature three energon cubes inside their compound, while Megatron's features two blue Fire Blast effects and the AllSpark.
Merchandise
Dark of the Moon
Robots In Disguise (2015)
- Transformers: Robots in Disguise Play-Doh Kit
- This kit is essentially the above Dark Of The Moon kit in new packaging.
Trivia
- Most of the time, the compound used in the WFC toys aren't very sticky or messy, so it shouldn't mess up your toy.
External links
- Play-Doh on Wikipedia
- Official Hasbro brand page

