Poo Bingo

  

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Discover all you ever wanted to know about poo – and more – with Poop Bingo! Featuring 24 animals and their uniquely shaped poops, this is the bingo game to end all bingo games. Kids will delight in discovering that wombats poop in cubes and that penguins poop in squirts that come in different colours depending on what they’ve eaten! Be the first to fill your game card with animals and poops to win BINGO!

Beautifully packaged, Poop Bingo is gorgeously illustrated by award-winning illustrator Claudia Boldt while also containing an informative booklet with all the things you wanted to know – and never dared to ask – about animals and their poops, written by Aidan Onn.

Equipment

Animals that are featured include: ants, bats, bears, beetles, cats, cows, elephants, horses, koalas, mice, penguins, pandas, rhinos, snails, vultures and many more. Did you know that the microscopic demodex mite (often called an eyelash mite because it lives on our faces) is the only creature (that we know of) that never needs to poop? Read about this and other fun and smelly facts in the accompanying booklet.

Poop Bingo comes complete with a fully illustrated board, chips, a small container to store them in, eight double-sided game cards and counters ready for players to mark up their cards and score those points!

Also available in the Laurence King Bingo series for kids are: Dinosaur Bingo, Jungle Bingo, Scary Bingo and Wonder Women Bingo. Our adult Bingo series features: Bird Bingo, Bug Bingo, Cat Bingo, Dog Bingo, Monkey Bingo, Ocean Bingo andRoyal Bingo.

Poo-Chi
ManufacturerSega Toys
InventorSamuel James Lloyd
Matt Lucas [1]
CountryUnited States
Year of creationApril 1, 2000; 20 years ago
Price3,980 yen (Japan)
$24.99 United States
TypeRobot dog

Poo-Chi (or Poochi, Poochie), one of the first generations of robopet toys, is a robot dog designed by Samuel James Lloyd and Matt Lucas, manufactured by Sega Toys, and distributed by Tiger Toys.[1] Poo-Chi was released in 2000 and discontinued in 2002.

History[edit]

Sega Toys' Poo-Chi hit markets on 1 April 2000, with Hasbro's Tiger Electronics distributing the toy in all countries other than Japan and Korea. Retailing at a price of 3,980 yen (then the equivalent of US$38) in Japan and $24.99 in the United States, the toy offered significantly cheaper competition to the AIBO's prices of up to 250,000 yen (then US$2,400).[2][3][4] At the time, Hasbro's sales in their leading Furby line were slowing since its initial release in 1998 and sales of Star Wars branded merchandise was in decline.[5] The Poo-Chi's release was a success, selling over 10 million units worldwide over the span of 8 months since its initial debut.[4]

Special editions of the Poo-Chi soon sprouted, such as the 102 Dalmatians holiday release of three Poo-Chis resembling the characters Domino, Little Dipper, and Oddball.[4][6] In addition to special editions, an upgraded version, the Super Poo-Chi,[7] and differing breeds of the Poo-Chi were released (all of which could communicate together), along with spin-offs such as the Meow-Chi and the Chirpy-Chi.[4] Miniature versions were featured as toys in the McDonald'sHappy Meal.[8]

Poo-Chi stopped selling in 2002, having been replaced by FurReal Friends.

Description[edit]

The original Poo-Chi had a gray body with ears, tail, and leg joints of either purple, blue, pink or green colour. With four legs allowing the toy to stand up or lie down, it utilized a red LED display as eyes to show emotion.[9][10]

Special Editions[edit]

The Christmas Special Edition Poo-Chi was offered for a limited time, coloured red and white with snowflake designs throughout the body, ears, with an interactive bone included in its seasonal box. The toy had its list of songs updated to include Christmas music. The Christmas Special Edition was only available in a handful of countries and retailed for 2–3 months, making it the rarest and most collectible of the genre with collectors realizing in excess of US$300 for boxed Christmas Poo-Chi units.

Speech[edit]

Poo-Chi spoke using prerecorded sounds such as barks, whines, and growls. Due to limitations of the toy's technology, most of the sounds were rendered as beeps rather than a realistic sound effect. Poo-Chi could also 'bark' songs, which could be prompted by pressing the button on the top of its head.

Pro Bingo League

Spin-offs[edit]

Multiple spin-offs of the Poo-Chi were produced. All were based on different animals, other than the Super Poo-Chi, a larger version of the original toy.

  • Meow-Chi - a robotic cat.
  • Super Poo-Chi - a larger version of the original toy.
  • Dino-Chi - a robotic dinosaur, with two types produced: the Dino-Chi T. Rex and the Dino-Chi Pterodactyl.
  • Chirpy-Chi - a robotic bird.
  • Petal-Chi - a robotic flower or plant.
  • Robo-Baby - a robotic baby.
  • Botster - a regular robot.

Songs[edit]

The Poo-Chi could 'sing' one of 6 songs when following the light sensor in its nose being activated, the touch sensor on its head was pressed. The toy would then emit a series of high-pitched beeps. The user could afterwards press the touch sensor, the number of times the sensor having been pressed corresponding to a different tune. The different songs the Poo-Chi could play are as follows:

Number of sensor pressesSong title
1The Wedding March
2Camptown Races
3Bingo
4I've Been Working on the Railroad/Home On the Range
5Beethoven No.9
6When the Saints Come Marching In

Poo-Chi would often sing 'Ode to Joy' by Ludwig van Beethoven when happy, and if another Poo-Chi or Robo-Chi pet was nearby (such as a Meow-Chi), that other Robo-Chi would begin to sing 'Ode to Joy' as well, though the playback would not be synchronized.

Cow Poop Game

References[edit]

  1. ^ ab'Poo-Chi Robotic Dog at ElectronicPets.org'. Electronic Pets Ltd. Retrieved 1 May 2011.
  2. ^Inouye, Itsuo (19 January 2000). 'Puppy love'. Chicago Sun-Times. Associated Press. p. 58.
  3. ^'Robofish splash down in Tokyo'. BBC News. 16 March 2000. Retrieved 15 November 2013.
  4. ^ abcd'Poo-Chi Leads the Pack in Holiday Toy Sales' (Press release). Business Wire. 12 December 2000. Retrieved 15 November 2013.
  5. ^'Slow sales cause Hasbro second-quarter earnings to fall 80 percent'. Associated Press. Pawtucket, RI. 20 July 2000.
  6. ^'The Walt Disney Company Annual Report 2000'(PDF). Walt Disney Company. p. 41. Retrieved 15 November 2013.
  7. ^Kageyama, Yuri (13 October 2000). 'Sony hopes for success with new robotic pet'. Bangor Daily News. Associated Press. pp. A9.
  8. ^'Tiger Robo-Chi Pets™ Arrive at McDonald's February 23 Happy Meal Event to Feature Newest Cyber-Pal, Chirpy-Chi' (Press release). 20 February 2001. Retrieved 15 November 2013.
  9. ^'Poo-Chi Instruction Manual'(PDF). Tiger Electronics. Retrieved 1 May 2011.
  10. ^'Pio-Chi Robot Dog by Tiger Electronics Ltd - The Old Robots Web Site'. The Old Robots Web Site. Retrieved 1 May 2011.

External links[edit]

Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Poo-Chi&oldid=1004217658'