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Most expensive toys of 2005

What you might find under the tree when money is no object

Forbes.com
Just 8 1/2 inches tall, 8 inches wide and 5 inches in diameter, these gem-encrusted Mr. & Mrs. Potato Head figures cost $8,000.
By Susan Yara
updated 9:09 p.m. ET Dec. 12, 2005

While Santa is making his list and checking it twice, for some fortunate kids — or for those who just are young at heart — it won't matter who is naughty or nice. When money is no object, the priciest toys aren't coming from the North Pole anyway.

While the average toy sells for around $7, according to the NPD group, a Port Washington, N.Y.-based market research firm, the world's most expensive toys can cost many times that. And while this season's hottest toy, Microsoft's new Xbox 360 costs around $300, it doesn't compare to a $300,000 3-D motion simulator from the Rolls-Royce of toy stores FAO Schwarz. (Granted, there probably isn't anywhere near the demand for the motion simulator as the Xbox 360.)

At the very top-end, it's not clear who would actually buy a $300,000 toy, or even Hammacher Schlemmer's $50,000, 7-foot, remote-controlled Robby the Robot. The odds are that such extravagances are intended more for Dad than Junior.

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The same might be said of an original Teddy bear being auctioned at Christie's in London during its Christmas sale. It has an estimate of between $17,000 to $26,000. It's hard to imagine that any parent, no matter how doting, would let their child subject such a pricey plaything to the kind of abuse that most bed beasts suffer. Ditto a hand-tooled, $5,840 Monopoly set and a $1,699.99 Lionel train set. Let's not kid ourselves — no pun intended — children may like playing with them, but they probably wouldn't ever get a chance to.

Of course, some of these toys actually could be enjoyed by kids, and many are expressly designed to be so. The $16,000 replica Mercedes-Benz SL convertible and the $800 Custom Couture by Imagine This, both at FAO Schwarz, just won't fit Mom or Dad, no matter how much they might try.

© 2009 Forbes.com

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