Bike Pegs
Metal stunt pegs that bolted onto bike wheel axles — the essential accessory for grinding rails and the iconic move of doubling up by having a friend stand on your rear pegs. Cheap, ubiquitous, and a rite of passage for any kid with a BMX.
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Metal stunt pegs that bolted onto bike wheel axles — the essential accessory for grinding rails and the iconic move of doubling up by having a friend stand on your rear pegs. Cheap, ubiquitous, and a rite of passage for any kid with a BMX.
The legless, fold-flat fabric chair that turned any patch of ground into a seat — clip the side buckles, lean back, and the straps hold you in a recline on dirt, sand, bleachers or gym floors. If you sat "in" something at summer camp in the 90s, it was probably a Crazy Creek.
The mirror-chrome BMX bike every kid on the street wanted in the 1990s. Dyno's signature all-chrome chromoly frames, gyro detangler stems, and pegs for grinding defined an era of sidewalk stunts and backyard tricks.
The end-of-year outdoor blowout when class got canceled for a day of sack races, tug-of-war, three-legged races, and water-balloon tosses out on the field. Everybody went home sunburned and clutching a ribbon — even if it just said "Participant."
The foam disc shooter was the 1990s answer to playground warfare — a handheld blaster that launched soft foam discs across the yard with impressive speed and distance. Multiple toy companies jumped on the trend during the mid-90s, each claiming their foam discs flew fastest or farthest. The discs curved through the air, were harmless to catch, and sparked countless epic indoor and outdoor battles.
Not one toy but a whole line of foam sports gear from OddzOn — the company behind the Koosh Ball. The Vortex name spanned whistling foam footballs that screamed through the air and, later, ring-shooting blasters that fired foam rings across the yard. If it was foam and it flew far, OddzOn stamped 'Vortex' on it.
Springy platforms strapped to your shoes that promised to make you bounce like an astronaut on the moon. The concept was ancient—1950s 'satellite jumping shoes' started it all—but the neon plastic 1990s version, constantly advertised on kids' TV and backed by pure fantasy, became a playground staple. Execution never quite matched the hype, but that never stopped anyone from trying.
Foam darts that made foam blasters the must-have weapon of childhood wars. Unlike squirt guns or cap guns, Nerf dart-blasters actually worked—you could fire foam across a backyard with real distance and accuracy, making office and dorm Nerf wars an endless arms race of new models and tactics.
The first Nerf blaster to fire arrows — big 11-inch finned foam ones that flew farther than anything else in the toy box. It looked like archery, it felt like archery, even if the strings were just for show. Suburban backyard warfare would never be the same.
The folding aluminum kick scooter that showed up in 2000 and sold millions before parents and shin guards became mandatory equipment. Named Spring/Summer Toy of the Year in 2000, Razor Scooters were on every driveway and schoolyard by 2001 — until suddenly they weren't, and the brand settled into a comfortable half-life of summer rentals and nostalgia.
The RC stunt car with enormous inflatable tires that was literally designed to crash. Kenner's Ricochet bounced, rebounded, flipped and kept driving — every collision was the point — and its 1994 TV commercial burned the image into a generation's heads long after the name faded.
A neon ankle hoop with a ball on a tether and a mechanical counter that kept score — the ultimate playground flex of the early 90s. Loop it around one ankle, swing it, hop the tether with your other leg, and chase your personal best. A deceptively simple toy that sparked a generation's skinned knees and fierce competition.
A squeeze bottle with a battery-powered fan on top—pump the trigger and get a weak, faintly warm cloud of mist on a scorching day. O2COOL's signature gadget rode the line between toy and survival gear, showing up everywhere from theme-park lines to Little League sidelines. The soft foam blades were safe to touch, even when a sibling grabbed for it mid-spray.
Engineer Lonnie Johnson's pump-action water blaster that transformed backyard warfare from squirt guns to soaked supremacy. The Super Soaker could drench opponents from across a yard and hold enough water for extended campaigns, making it the must-have weapon of every 1990s summer.