Electric Touring Car Race Season is Back in Hurst, TX 2022!

After a successful first season, Leon at our Hurst store is getting ready to start racing again!

If you like race cars, building, an equal playing field regarding power and weight, and don’t want to spend a ton on tools, it’s the perfect racing class to get involved in!

Here is the 2022 schedule for the 1/10th scale electric touring car races, located in the parking lot out front of our store at 746 Grapevine Highway (near TX-183 and Precinct Line Road, next to Lowe’s), Hurst TX 76054
– All races start at 6:00 PM on Sundays.
  • April 17
  • May 1
  • May 15
  • June 5
  • June 19
  • July 10
  • July 24
  • August 7
  • August 21
  • September 11

The featured chassis, a Tamiya TT-02, can be purchased at any of our HobbyTown locations. This is a skills based, spec chassis class that is durable and easy to get started in. Any skill level can be competitive with this chassis. This kit is simple to put together, with easy to follow instructions. If you get stuck, our staff is knowledgeable and able to help! With this car, you can have a ton of fun and even practice for a race in your driveway!

Please see the attached Rules and Regulations –> 1:10th Scale Electric Touring Car Class Rules and Regulations

If you have any questions, please call the Hurst store at 817-581-1027.

New Store Announcement – Arlington

New Store Announcement – Arlington

There is a new HobbyTown coming to the DFW area! This new addition to the family will be located in Arlington Texas, off of I-20 near the Parks Mall. Construction is underway currently and the store is scheduled to open in late Spring, 2022. This will be another big store like the Dallas location. As our other store, it will carry this same spirit and offerings. 

Hobby Town Gundam Build – Do you need all these tools?

How many tools does it take to build a Gundam kit? Hobby Town Dallas can tell us!

I have always been a bit intimidated by the prospect of building a Gundam kit. But I decided to take the plunge and give one a try! Because I thought they were so complicated, I assumed I would need a ton of tools and glue to put one together. This kit took me just under an hour to complete, but how many tools did I end up actually using?

#wildbillsht #wildbillstv

Music provided by Scorpius Antares https://youtu.be/itI58o1bCt0

 

Top Reasons to Play Board Games!

Top Reasons to Play Board Games!

In this digital age, many people have forgotten simpler ways to have fun. Time to put down the phone and see real 3d action with your family and friends! Just a few decades ago, people still used a board, some cards, plastic characters and dices to have fun with friends and families. As kids, we learn through play. We feed our imaginations by way of games and countless hours of innocent fun. This doesn’t have to stop as we enter adulthood however, in fact, the older we get the more important it is that we keep the motors of our imaginations running and engage in interactive play and social activities. Of course, no one expects you to prance around in dress-up clothing (unless you want to) and relive childhood frolicking. It takes a simple board game to keep our minds revitalized and our dispositions in high spirits. Studies have also shown to that playing board games or cards games can help with depression.

Board Games Make You Smart

Yup, you know the saying “reading makes you smarter”, well, so does a simple round of your favorite board game! Playing games helps you to really stretch those brain cells as you build puzzles, solve problems, memorize movements and get your creative juices flowing.

Prepare for some big words here. When you play a board or card game you stimulate the hippocampus and prefrontal cortex of your brain, these are the parts of your body which are responsible for complex thought and memory formation. This means that while you are entertaining yourself through a fun activity, you’re also strengthening your memory and building onto your logical thinking. Strong mind – strong body right!?

Take playing Chess for example… Want to learn how to use the help of many to achieve results in life? Insert Chess here.. the skills you obtain help you use moves in life so you can win!

Another very popular board game is Risk (remember the Seinfeld episode Titled “The Label Maker” where Kramer and Newman battled over the game) and it’s a relatively simple strategy game about world domination. Due to its simplicity, Risk is widely popular among casual gamers. However, Risk can still become drawn out and long, requiring more than one day to complete a single game session. It is not uncommon for the two remaining players to battle it out until late at night, while the eliminated players watch TV, play with their smartphone and finally go home. There are obviously other war strategy games that we can choose and they could actually be Risk on steroids. Board games should be good enough for people who want to micromanage their lives properly. In the digital era, many people find it much more practical to play video games, especially those that have game rules similar to board games, even so; we should be aware that board games can bring us enjoyments that are not typically available in their digital counterparts.

Board games are extremely social and cool.

Board games are extremely social.

And they aren’t social in a ‘like this post’ sort of social. Board games are face-to-face. Board game nights are becoming part of a lot of nerds’ routines. Who doesn’t want to get together with friends?

Well, add a few snacks and a couple games like Dead of Winter, Auztralia, or Suburbia to a Friday evening and your social life just got a +1 mana boost.

Board games are analog in a digital world.

We live in a digital world, both at work and school, but at home as well. Board games offer an often welcome analog experience. Three dimensional in play… Board games offer an olfactory experience and are highly tactile and it’s often surprisingly satisfying just to hold and fiddle with the little pieces or miniatures that fill board games like Chess. Speaking of Chess… check out the Great American Payer line of offerings from Bobby Fischer Chess. at Wild Bill’s HobbyTown locations we have ample supply!

Board games are collectible.

Sure, you have the obvious, such as collectible card games like Magic: The Gathering. But boxed board games are becoming highly collectible items, with a lot of nerds building up huge libraries of board games, trying to get the best of each category. Currently we have limited editions of Monopoly, Scrabble and Risk that will be family heirlooms someday.

Board games are beautiful.

Board games are beautiful.

The quality of board games has risen considerably from the old Parker Brothers games. Board games typically have professional art work and graphic design, that often holds up better than most other media. Look at Catan, Magic The Gathering, Mysterium, and Codenames picture card game with there simple black and white art deco style drawings.

Modern board games are cool.

Not to pile on poor ‘ole Monopoly, but many people are surprised by the depth of play of modern board games. The best board games of today are incredibly engaging and sophisticated. In short, they are cool.

These aren’t your granddad’s games where you drop a checker into a slot in order to get four in a row. No, there is strategy and skill involved, with many of today’s games having a depth that you could play years and not truly master it.

The board gaming community is welcoming.

The board gaming community is welcoming.

Not many niches feel welcoming and inclusive nowadays, but board gaming typically bucks this trend. There is a style of game for everyone, and a level of competition where just about anyone can jump aboard.

Unlike a lot of other industries, the board game community is a friendly place. It is friendly in terms of social aspect, in terms of being kind to one other, in terms of inviting new people to the table, and in terms of being welcoming to other people.

The board game community is becoming better supported.

Not only does Wild Bill’s HobbyTown locations in the DFW area carry all sorts of awesome games, but there are cool networks popping up online. almost all of our employees play multiple games and have tried many of them out. We may not be 100% versed in every game, but you can sure to be ask any of us about what’s popular!

Digressing back… Games are back and better than ever! We even started a Friday Game night using Magic the Gathering!

Magic The Gathering – Rockwall HobbyTown starts Friday Night Magic

Magic The Gathering – Rockwall HobbyTown starts Friday Night Magic

At our Rockwall location we will be adding FNM (Friday Night Magic) game night! We have Employee Enthusiasts’ that love Magic The Gathering game, and want to help grow this fun and exciting game night to our Rockwall Hobbytown location. We have many commander decks, booster packs, draft boosters and more!

Magic The Gathering (MTG) sets and boosters can be purchased at all 5 locations (Rockwall, Irving, Dallas, Hurst, and Lewisville). Our first Friday Night Magic will be held on Friday September 24th 2021 in Rockwall @ 935 East Interstate 30 Rockwall, TX 75087 We will get Started at 7:00pm and end at 10pm. the cost is $20 to play and you will receive 2 draft boosters. There will be prizes awarded for the top 3 players!

What is Magic the Gathering?

Magic: The Gathering (colloquially known as Magic or MTG) is a tabletop and digital collectible card game created by Richard Garfield.[1] Released in 1993 by Wizards of the Coast (now a subsidiary of Hasbro), Magic was the first trading card game and had approximately thirty-five million players as of December 2018,[2][3][4] and over twenty billion Magic cards were produced in the period from 2008 to 2016, during which time it grew in popularity.[5][6]

A player in Magic takes the role of a Planeswalker, doing battle with other players as Planeswalkers by casting spells, using artifacts, and summoning creatures as depicted on individual cards drawn from their individual decks. A player defeats their opponent typically (but not always) by casting spells and attacking with creatures to deal damage to the opponent’s “life total,” with the object being to reduce it from 20 to 0. Although the original concept of the game drew heavily from the motifs of traditional fantasy role-playing games such as Dungeons & Dragons, the gameplay bears little similarity to pencil-and-paper adventure games, while simultaneously having substantially more cards and more complex rules than many other card games.

Magic can be played by two or more players, either in person with printed cards or on a computer, smartphone or tablet with virtual cards through the Internet-based software Magic: The Gathering Online or other video games such as Magic: The Gathering Arena. It can be played in various rule formats, which fall into two categories: constructed and limited. Limited formats involve players building a deck spontaneously out of a pool of random cards with a minimum deck size of 40 cards;[7] in constructed formats, players create decks from cards they own, usually with a minimum of 60 cards per deck.

New cards are released on a regular basis through expansion sets. An organized tournament system (the DCI) played at the international level and a worldwide community of professional Magic players has developed, as well as a substantial resale market for Magic cards. Certain cards can be valuable due to their rarity in production and utility in gameplay, with prices ranging from a few cents to tens of thousands of dollars.

*courtesy of Wikipedia