I present my cool little Hallmark Story Buddy, Abigail!
The videography isn't great and perhaps I should have turned up the story audio a bit more, but as an unlisted video, perfection isn't that important.
The Hallmark Story Buddy line was introduced in 2012, and I found Abigail at Walmart, in the greeting card section of course. Abigail, or any of the Hallmark Story Buddies, lack mechanical parts so there's no mouth movements or fancy LCD eyes. This ensures longevity as there aren't as many parts to break. In the books themselves, certain sentences are highlighted in bolder text. These sentences are what cause the story buddy to respond to the reader. So this means the buddies are constantly "listening" for these key phrases. It's no privacy issue though as these story buddies don't have bluetooth or Wifi capability. The "online story time" from what I could find was a companion website printed on the back of the original packaging. There were companion apps released, but the box only lists iPhone/iPad compatibility. No mention of Android.
My Abigail story buddy came with three books and a companion CD, which I ripped to MP3. There was at least one more Abigail book released that wasn't included in my set. Some of the other buddies available were two little Christmas huskies Jingle and Bell, a mystery solving raccoon named Watson, Nugget the puppy, and Cooper the bear. There was even a licensed Scooby Doo story buddy as well.
Unfortunately, Hallmark has cast story buddies into the dustbin of tech history. They can no longer be found on Hallmark's website. I think the Jingle app is still available, but in the case of Nugget the puppy, both the app and companion website are gone. There doesn't seem to be a Web archive of the Nugget site either. The toys did get good reviews upon their 2012 release, but looks like the popularity waned in the face of more appealing apps for kids, I guess.
On the plus side, you can find many of these story buddies on eBay brand new for cheap. Just pray that the pre-installed alkaline batteries haven't started leaking yet, and keep in mind you're probably limited to just the books and companion CD for interactivity.
Here is the web archive of the main Story Buddy website as mentioned in the storyteller CD above:
https://web.archive.org/web/201301231833...torybuddy/
For 2012, these were rather cool, and still are today IMO. It shows that interactive toys don't need Wifi or Bluetooth to be fun. I also find it funny how Abigail's head is bigger than her body, almost like a non-Anime SuperDeformed design. Her adult mom is the same way.
The videography isn't great and perhaps I should have turned up the story audio a bit more, but as an unlisted video, perfection isn't that important.
The Hallmark Story Buddy line was introduced in 2012, and I found Abigail at Walmart, in the greeting card section of course. Abigail, or any of the Hallmark Story Buddies, lack mechanical parts so there's no mouth movements or fancy LCD eyes. This ensures longevity as there aren't as many parts to break. In the books themselves, certain sentences are highlighted in bolder text. These sentences are what cause the story buddy to respond to the reader. So this means the buddies are constantly "listening" for these key phrases. It's no privacy issue though as these story buddies don't have bluetooth or Wifi capability. The "online story time" from what I could find was a companion website printed on the back of the original packaging. There were companion apps released, but the box only lists iPhone/iPad compatibility. No mention of Android.
My Abigail story buddy came with three books and a companion CD, which I ripped to MP3. There was at least one more Abigail book released that wasn't included in my set. Some of the other buddies available were two little Christmas huskies Jingle and Bell, a mystery solving raccoon named Watson, Nugget the puppy, and Cooper the bear. There was even a licensed Scooby Doo story buddy as well.
Unfortunately, Hallmark has cast story buddies into the dustbin of tech history. They can no longer be found on Hallmark's website. I think the Jingle app is still available, but in the case of Nugget the puppy, both the app and companion website are gone. There doesn't seem to be a Web archive of the Nugget site either. The toys did get good reviews upon their 2012 release, but looks like the popularity waned in the face of more appealing apps for kids, I guess.
On the plus side, you can find many of these story buddies on eBay brand new for cheap. Just pray that the pre-installed alkaline batteries haven't started leaking yet, and keep in mind you're probably limited to just the books and companion CD for interactivity.
Here is the web archive of the main Story Buddy website as mentioned in the storyteller CD above:
https://web.archive.org/web/201301231833...torybuddy/
For 2012, these were rather cool, and still are today IMO. It shows that interactive toys don't need Wifi or Bluetooth to be fun. I also find it funny how Abigail's head is bigger than her body, almost like a non-Anime SuperDeformed design. Her adult mom is the same way.
I love foxes, especially the one in my avatar.