There are a great many things I like about the Vintage line, but also some that I don't. I know it's easy to forget when Kenner started planning the original line back in 1977, they were trying to make popular toys, not high-end collectibles or ultra-realistic sculpts. Even so, there are some things that have always irked me about the line, and others that remain a delight. I thought I would share my picks for the best and worst design features in the Vintage line, plus my favourite and least favourite Vintage toys, which are not necessarily the same things! 
I invite others to offer their own choices, and it would be interesting to hear your reasons.
Here are mine:
Worst Design Feature
For me that's easy; the original telescoping lightsabers. Whoever thought the double-telescoping sabers would be a good idea needed their head examining. Fantastically flimsy and prone to breaking if you so much as look at them, the first issue double-telescoping sabers were doomed to failure from the start. They were quite rightly dispensed with rapidly, but what amazes me more is that they left us with the single-telescoping design which is almost as bad! That saber tip was just asking to snap off! Even as a child playing with these in the 70's I knew this was a poor design! I guess the tooling costs for changing the mould from the double to the single telescoping version probably played a big part in Kenner's decision, but my god it made for a poor toy!
Best Design Feature
Three and three-quarter inch scale with 5 points of articulation! As toys, the figures needed to be functional playthings. Previous dolls of the time had generally been in a larger scale, so the decision to produce Star Wars figures at a 4 inch scale whilst retaining 5 points of articulation was a masterstroke. Simple, yet highly effective, it gave kids action figures they could easily hold and play with, which were poseable and fun, and moved them away from being simple statues. The scale also allowed Kenner to craft ships, vehicles and playsets at a reasonable size and at an affordable price.
Least Favourite Toy
I generally don't like Star Wars toys which aren't in the films. For that reason, I've never got on with the Mini-rigs. I understand completely why Kenner made them; they were cheaper alternatives to the bigger ships and vehicles, and in that regard they were of course successful. Not every family or kid could afford an AT-AT or a Slave 1, but a PDT-8 or an MTV-7 was much more within financial reach. I don't object to their existence, and of course many collectors and kids love them, but for me they were always a distraction and an irrelevance. I didn't own any as a child, and I've never bought any as an adult collector. I simply don't like them.
Most Favourite Toy
Easy. The Palitoy Death Star. A truly inspired, ingenious, simple, low cost, high play value, folding/collapsible playset which is large when fully assembled, yet small when packed away. It has a moving trash compactor wall, escape chute, opening doors, walkways, a gun turret, super art work and is tremendous fun to play with! In truth, this is actually my favourite toy of all time, not just in the Vintage line as I believe it ticks so many boxes. I truly don't understand why Hasbro never copied the idea in the modern line, as it seems a no-brainer for making a cheap, but highly effective playset.
Anyway, those are my choices. What are yours?
(All pictures above taken from completed eBay auctions)
I invite others to offer their own choices, and it would be interesting to hear your reasons.
Here are mine:
Worst Design Feature
For me that's easy; the original telescoping lightsabers. Whoever thought the double-telescoping sabers would be a good idea needed their head examining. Fantastically flimsy and prone to breaking if you so much as look at them, the first issue double-telescoping sabers were doomed to failure from the start. They were quite rightly dispensed with rapidly, but what amazes me more is that they left us with the single-telescoping design which is almost as bad! That saber tip was just asking to snap off! Even as a child playing with these in the 70's I knew this was a poor design! I guess the tooling costs for changing the mould from the double to the single telescoping version probably played a big part in Kenner's decision, but my god it made for a poor toy!
Best Design Feature
Three and three-quarter inch scale with 5 points of articulation! As toys, the figures needed to be functional playthings. Previous dolls of the time had generally been in a larger scale, so the decision to produce Star Wars figures at a 4 inch scale whilst retaining 5 points of articulation was a masterstroke. Simple, yet highly effective, it gave kids action figures they could easily hold and play with, which were poseable and fun, and moved them away from being simple statues. The scale also allowed Kenner to craft ships, vehicles and playsets at a reasonable size and at an affordable price.
Least Favourite Toy
I generally don't like Star Wars toys which aren't in the films. For that reason, I've never got on with the Mini-rigs. I understand completely why Kenner made them; they were cheaper alternatives to the bigger ships and vehicles, and in that regard they were of course successful. Not every family or kid could afford an AT-AT or a Slave 1, but a PDT-8 or an MTV-7 was much more within financial reach. I don't object to their existence, and of course many collectors and kids love them, but for me they were always a distraction and an irrelevance. I didn't own any as a child, and I've never bought any as an adult collector. I simply don't like them.
Most Favourite Toy
Easy. The Palitoy Death Star. A truly inspired, ingenious, simple, low cost, high play value, folding/collapsible playset which is large when fully assembled, yet small when packed away. It has a moving trash compactor wall, escape chute, opening doors, walkways, a gun turret, super art work and is tremendous fun to play with! In truth, this is actually my favourite toy of all time, not just in the Vintage line as I believe it ticks so many boxes. I truly don't understand why Hasbro never copied the idea in the modern line, as it seems a no-brainer for making a cheap, but highly effective playset.
Anyway, those are my choices. What are yours?
(All pictures above taken from completed eBay auctions)