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Your Childhood Toys Are STILL HERE because of Them! / @mattwaltonchannel www.instagram.com/toyattics What if the ideas behind your favorite 1980s action figures never actually disappeared? Last year at Zolocon, we filmed an interview with Formo Toys and their Legends of Dragonore line. At the time, it felt like just another cool independent toy company making fantasy action figures inspired by the 80s. But after diving deep into Warrior Beasts, Golden Bat, Warrior of the Galaxy, and the world of vintage “knockoff” toys, something started to connect. This isn’t just a story about one modern toy line. It’s a story about how 80s toy design never truly died. In the mid-1980s, companies like Remco released lines like Warrior of the Galaxy—muscular fantasy action figures built in the same scale and spirit as Masters of the Universe. These weren’t backed by massive cartoons or billion-dollar licenses. They were built around bold silhouettes, exaggerated proportions, barbarian themes, monsters, dragons, and modular imagination. They were designed to plug into whatever story you were already telling on your bedroom floor. Over time, many of these lines were dismissed as “knockoffs.” But when you look closer, you begin to see a pattern. These toys weren’t lazy copies. They were adaptable systems. They survived canceled cartoons, shifting licenses, and companies that didn’t make it into the next decade. The ideas persisted—even when the branding didn’t. Fast forward to today. Companies like Formo Toys are creating original intellectual property rooted in that same fantasy action figure format. Legends of Dragonore. Warrior of the Galaxy revisited. 5.5-inch barbarian figures. Dragons. Troglodytes. Tree-men. Muscular heroes and powerful female warriors. Not as reboots. Not as parodies. But as continuation. In this video, we revisit the interview we filmed a year ago and examine why it matters more now than it did then. We explore the lineage between vintage 80s toy lines and modern indie toy companies. We talk about the tension between vintage toy collectors and new toy lines. And we ask a bigger question: If you love vintage toys, what does it mean to support the ideas that made them great? This video is for: • Vintage action figure collectors • Fans of 1980s fantasy toys • Warrior Beasts and Golden Bat collectors • Masters of the Universe style figure fans • Indie toy enthusiasts • Retro nostalgia lovers • Anyone interested in toy history and toy design Whether you collect strictly vintage toys or mix in modern indie lines, this episode is about understanding the continuity of toy culture. Because sometimes the most “vintage” thing you can do isn’t preserving the past—it’s recognizing when the past is still being built. If you grew up with 80s action figures… this one’s for you. #80sToys #VintageToys #ActionFigures #ToyCollecting #WarriorBeasts #GoldenBat #FantasyFigures #RetroToys #IndieToys #ToyHistory 00:00 – I Missed This 00:45 – The Interview From Last Year 02:10 – What Was Warrior of the Galaxy? 04:30 – The “Knockoff” Problem 06:10 – Why This Actually Matters 08:00 – The Most Vintage Thing You Can Do