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Nostalgic Things From 1996 That Deserve a Revival in 2026

Story Center by Story Center
March 20, 2026
Reading Time: 7 mins read
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Can you believe it has been 30 years since 1996?

Let that sink in for a second. Three decades ago, we were rewinding VHS tapes, hauling CD players everywhere we went, and living life blissfully offline. There was no doomscrolling, no push notifications, no group chats blowing up at 11 p.m. on a Tuesday.

It was a simpler time — and honestly, a pretty great one.

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Now, in our 30s and 40s, we’re navigating mortgages, meal planning, and the existential weight of adulting. But somewhere in the back of our brains, a little voice whispers: Remember when your biggest problem was keeping your Tamagotchi alive?

While technology has given us plenty of upgrades since then, there are some things we forgot about from the ’90s that deserve a serious second look.

From the satisfying click of a CD player to the quirky trends that defined the decade, here are some nostalgic things from 1996 that could genuinely use a revival in 2026.

The Gaming Glory Days

Let’s start where it matters most — the games that shaped us.

18. Nintendo 64. If you didn’t lose at least one friendship over a round of GoldenEye or Mario Kart, did you even have a childhood? The Nintendo 64 was released in Japan in June 1996 and in the U.S. in September 1996, and it changed everything. The four-controller setup practically invented local multiplayer as we knew it. No online lobbies, no matchmaking algorithms — just you, your friends crammed onto a couch, and pure, unfiltered competition.

17. PlayStation. The PlayStation had already landed in the U.S. in September 1995, but by 1996 it was a full-blown cultural force. It felt impossibly cool — like a machine designed specifically for kids who were growing up and wanted their gaming to grow up with them.

16. GameBoy Pocket. Released in 1996, seven years after the original GameBoy, the GameBoy Pocket was the sleek, slimmed-down upgrade we didn’t know we needed. It slid into a backpack pocket, came along on every car ride, and made long waits at the dentist’s office almost bearable. Portable gaming before smartphones meant you had to commit to bringing entertainment with you, and the GameBoy Pocket made that commitment easy.

15. Minesweeper. Here’s the one nobody talks about enough. Minesweeper was released in 1990 and later featured in Windows 95, solidifying its popularity. Be honest — did any of us actually understand the rules at first, or were we all just clicking random squares and praying? Either way, Minesweeper was the original time-killer, the ancestor of every phone game you’ve ever opened “just for a minute” during a work break.

14. Windows 95. Speaking of which, Windows 95 was released in 1995 and introduced the Start menu, Taskbar, and desktop icons — the building blocks of every computer interaction we’ve had since. By 1996, it was the operating system powering our household PCs, our Minesweeper sessions, and our very first, agonizingly slow trips onto the internet.

Tech Gadgets We Couldn’t Live Without

13. CD Players. Before streaming playlists with 10,000 songs in your pocket, there was the sacred ritual of choosing one album to bring with you. CD players were the portable music experience of 1996 — portable MP3 players weren’t introduced until 1998. That meant carefully balancing a Discman while walking so it wouldn’t skip. It was an art form. It built character.

12. Flip Phones. The first major flip phone, the Motorola StarTAC, was released in 1996, and there has never been a more satisfying way to end a phone call than snapping one shut. Smartphones could never.

11. USB Devices. USB devices were officially released in January 1996, before everything migrated to the “cloud.” Remember when transferring files meant physically carrying something from one place to another? There was something oddly satisfying about having your data in your hand.

10. VHS Tapes. DVD players weren’t introduced in the U.S. until 1997, so 1996 was peak VHS era. “Be kind, rewind” wasn’t just a sticker — it was a moral code. And there was real anticipation in popping a tape into the VCR, watching it whir to life, and fast-forwarding through previews you’d already seen a hundred times.

9. Box TVs. Flat screen televisions didn’t enter the market until 1997, so in 1996, we were all gathered around massive, furniture-weight cathode ray tube sets. Moving one required at least two people and a strategy session.

The Pop Culture Moments That Defined Us

8. Tamagotchi. The Tamagotchi was released in Japan in 1996 and later in the U.S. in 1997, and it was basically our first lesson in responsibility. A tiny digital pet that needed constant feeding, cleaning, and attention — and the crushing guilt when you inevitably let it down. It’s wild to think a keychain-sized gadget could produce that much emotional attachment.

7. Tickle Me Elmo. Tickle Me Elmo was released in July 1996 and went viral during the 1996 Christmas season. If your parents managed to snag one, they were heroes. If they didn’t, you probably heard about the lengths other parents went to for years afterward. It was the holiday toy frenzy before Black Friday became a contact sport.

6. Beanie Babies. Beanie Babies were created in 1993 but gained extreme popularity in the mid-1990s. We were told — promised — these little stuffed animals would be worth a fortune someday. Somewhere in your parents’ attic, there’s a plastic bin full of them with the tags still attached, waiting to fund a retirement that will never come.

5. Blue’s Clues. Blue’s Clues, hosted by Steve Burns, premiered on Nickelodeon in September 1996. Steve talked to us like we mattered, waited patiently for our answers through the screen, and made us feel like the smartest kids in the room. If you know, you know.

4. The Macarena. Originally released by Los del Rio in 1993, then by the Bayside Boys in 1995, the Macarena hit No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100 in 1996 before phasing out. It was at every school dance, every wedding, every family cookout. Now everyone does similar dances on TikTok — but the Macarena didn’t require Wi-Fi.

3. The Dancing Baby. The Dancing Baby meme was one of the internet’s first viral videos, created in 1996 and used as a screensaver. Before memes had a name, this weird, jittery, 3D-rendered infant was bouncing across computer monitors everywhere. It was bizarre. It was delightful. It was the beginning of internet culture as we know it.

The Analog Joy We Left Behind

2. Skip-It. Skip-It was basically a hula-hoop for your foot — a good form of exercise that doubled as a game. Recess royalty was determined by your Skip-It count, and the satisfying click-click-click of the counter on your ankle was its own kind of music.

1. Board Games. Now everyone plays on their phones, and game nights are uncommon. But in 1996, gathering around a table with your family or friends and a beat-up box of Monopoly or Clue was a weeknight staple. No downloads, no updates, no in-app purchases — just dice, cards, and the very real threat of flipping the board when things went south.

Why 1996 Still Hits Different

30 years later, these aren’t just products or trends — they’re the artifacts of a shared experience.

Every millennial who reads this list is going to have a slightly different memory attached to each item, but the feeling is the same: a time when life moved slower, entertainment required a little more effort, and the best moments happened offline.

Could these things genuinely use a revival in 2026? Maybe. But even if they don’t come back, the memories aren’t going anywhere.

This article was created by content specialists using various tools, including AI.



Ryan Brennan

Miami Herald

Ryan Brennan is a content specialist working with McClatchy Media’s Trend Hunter and national content specialists team.

‘ The preceding article may include information circulated by third parties ’

‘ Some details of this article were extracted from the following source www.miamiherald.com ’

Tags: 1996cd playernostalgicthings that are nostalgicthings we forgot about
Story Center

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