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11 Sensational Facts About Furby

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Have you finished your holiday shopping yet? Twenty-five years ago, consumers were lining up for Furby—the furry, talkative doll that brought in big bucks for Hasbro as the must-have toy of the 1998 Christmas season. Reception to the toy in some corners was … more mixed, to say the least. Find out more with these 11 facts.

One group that didn’t go gaga over Furby was the National Security Agency, which banned the popular toy at its Maryland headquarters. Per a 1999 CNN story, the concern was that Furbies would record and possibly repeat confidential material. (In Furbish, perhaps.)

Furby

A Furby starts out by speaking only Furbish, and then begins integrating English into its vocabulary. / Getty Images/GettyImages

Furbish, of course, is the Furby’s native language; it starts out speaking only Furbish and then begins integrating English into its vocabulary as its owner speaks to it more. A 2005 English-to-Furbish dictionary included 121 words, including diamond (“ay-koo”), monster (“moh-moh”), and whassup? (“doo-oo-tye?”). Hey, it was the ‘90s.

Teresa Kamau

Designers at Tiger Electronics were concerned the toy might only appeal to young girls. / Matthew Lloyd/GettyImages

Though the Furby was primarily targeted at young girls, designers at Tiger Electronics, which invented the toy, wanted it to appeal to boys as well. The solution? Give Furbies the ability to burp and fart.

In 1999, engineer Peter van der Linden issued the “Hack Furby” challenge, which offered $250 to the first person who could make a Furby reprogrammable. The engineers at Tiger Electronics had intentionally made this difficult by encasing the relevant components in an epoxy shell. This was in part to avoid the fate of Playskool’s Talking Barney toy, which was relatively easy to hack so that it would say curse words.

In 2016, Hasbro released the Furby Connect, which used an Internet-connected mobile app to interact with the world around it. UK consumer group Which?, working with security consulting firm Context, warned that a lack of robust security measures made it possible to hack into the toy and use it as a surveillance device.

Do you happen to be sitting on a Furby with a misprinted label? Get yourself to eBay, where special edition Furbies with misprinted labels have been known to sell for as much as $500.

Dream Toys 2012 - Launch Photocall

There are all kinds of Furbies—including vaguely horrifying ones. / Gareth Cattermole/GettyImages

Hasbro wasn’t content to stop at regular old Furbies. Among the special Furbies debuting between 1998 and 2002 were Wizard Furby, Santa Furby, Jester Furby, President Furby, Kid Cuisine Furby, and Hi-C Furby. In 2015, Hasbro released an $80 Star Wars tie-in called “Furbacca.” 

Dream Toys - Photocall

Gizmo got nothing on this cutie. / Gareth Cattermole/GettyImages

Designers at Tiger Electronics intentionally shrank the Furby’s ears following its 1998 Toy Fair debut, hoping to downplay its resemblance to the Mogwai from Warner Bros.’ Gremlins movies. But they didn’t go far enough to avoid a copyright infringement lawsuit from Warner Bros., which sued Hasbro for trademark infringement in late 1998. Hasbro settled, paying Warner Bros. a reported seven figures and agreeing to redesign the doll.

And that point wasn’t 1998, but 2016, when Bob Weinstein announced at the American Film Market that The Weinstein Company was working on a live-action/CGI hybrid about the furry little creatures. “We think that this can resonate as a four-quadrant film. It can’t just be a 90-minute commercial,” said Hasbro executive Stephen Davis.

While plans for a movie have stalled, you can whet your appetite with Furby Island, a 45-minute TV special about a girl and her family who venture to Furby Island and must save its inhabitants from the villainous Doctor Conquest. (The graphics are slightly terrifying.)

Best Furby toys: Furblets

Sing and play, the Furblet way. / Furby / Amazon

One of the newest Furbies slated to hit shelves is the Furblets Ooh-Koo Mini Friends—small Furby toys designed to clip right onto a backpack, so kiddos can take them wherever they want to go. These Furblets are only $10, making them a great stocking stuffer for little ones. Musical and brightly colored, they can even harmonize with other Furblets if you grab a few this holiday season.

A version of this article was originally published in 2017 and has been updated for 2023.

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Rebecca Pahle

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