I may have found the perfect white elephant gift

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The humble Tamagotchi is my new go-to for White Elephant gifts.


Karisa Langlo/CNET

This story is part of Holiday Gift Guide 2021, our list of ideas, by topic, by recipient and by price, to help you discover the perfect gift.

Love it or hate it, the white elephant gift exchange is now a big part of the holiday party circuit. Personally, I love it: the sanctioned thievery and the air of mystery that recalls the Christmas spirit of my credulous youth. And I also just really love buying the kinds of things that, for whatever reason, no one on my actual list wants. 

If you hate white elephant exchanges, chances are it’s because you hate having to come up with a gift. It’s just one more thing to buy, you say. I hear you, but I also offer a rebuttal. Introducing… the Tamagotchi.

Read more: Best stocking stuffers under $25

You may have heard of these little egg-shaped digital pets. First hitting US shelves in 1997, the humble keychain game is now nearing its 25th anniversary, which is about 9,000 years in Tamagotchi-time. In case you’re not familiar, the Tamagotchi is a standalone handheld game featuring a pet that hatches from an egg and grows up as you, the player and caregiver, attend to its every need. That includes feeding, providing enrichment, disciplining and, of course, cleaning up its fly-orbited poop. It was basically the Animal Crossing of its time.

Procuring a Tamagotchi in 1997 was, for me, a classic Jingle All the Way-style exercise in capitalist desperation, which made the toy all the more enjoyable when I was finally able to play with one. Given the supply chain slowdowns and delivery disruptions threatening this year’s holiday shopping season, there’s never been a better time (except maybe last year) to recapture the thrill of that particular chase.

The art and science of what makes a good white elephant gift

The perfect white elephant gift meets four criteria: Price point, wide appeal, stealability and balance between humor and utility. In this essay I will argue that the Tamagotchi, which is now readily available on Amazon and other chain stores like Target, Walmart and Best Buy (I even got one at Barnes & Noble!), is the rare quad-fecta of gifts that meets all four.

Let’s talk about price point first. The white elephant exchanges I’ve participated in range from $50 to “wrap up a half-melted pillar candle and call it a day.” At a reasonable $20, the original Gen 1 or Gen 2 Tamagotchi hits right in the middle, making it perfect for the midrange budget and the cheap-to-free alike. 

And like a stocking stuffer or a sharp cheddar, the original Tamagotchi pairs well with other things, if your price point’s a little higher. For instance, wrap up a Tamagotchi with a Pop It XL for a “viral toys: then and now”-themed gift in a $40 exchange. Or pair it with a Pets Alive Poppy the Booty Shakin’ Pug if your budget’s closer to $50 and give the whole spectrum of fake pets.

Read more: Hot holiday toys for 2021

Alternatively, you can find a more advanced Tamagotchi model that costs more than $20. For instance, Target sells a $35 Tamagotchi Pix, which features a touch screen and camera. Or pick up a $66 Tamagotchi On from Amazon, which has a corresponding app. (You can also try importing the new Tamagotchi Smart, which has not been released in the US.) And you can even find under-$20 options, like this $13 Pac-Man Tamagotchi from GameStop, or this $15 Hello Kitty version at Walmart. (And don’t sleep on the Star Wars R2-D2 Tamagotchi, which is also $20 on Amazon.

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Bandai

The next criterion: You want wide appeal because you don’t know who’s going to end up with your gift. The Tamagotchi transcends most demographic borders, namely age, because it’s got the nostalgia factor that we olds enjoy, while being a genuinely enjoyable game for the kids. And the Tamagotchi has always tried to bust the gender construct by being a video game (masculine!) about caregiving (feminine!).

Now let’s talk stealability and balance. Half the fun of a white elephant exchange is the stealing. But at those unfortunate parties wherein most-to-all gifts are undesirable even in an ironic way, stealing just doesn’t tend to happen. An unopened package, after all, holds much more hope for the future. Unlike, say, a set of dish towels or hand cream, the Tamagotchi is highly stealable. I think this is because it’s fun and cute and a little goofy, and it doesn’t take up too much space. Plus, it’s ironically hip to revel in ’90s nostalgia, and it’s perhaps earnestly hip to embrace kid stuff when the world’s a dumpster fire

Tamagotchi just has that je ne sais quoi, situated at the very narrow overlap between funny and useful in the Venn diagram of mass production. This is important because some white elephant exchanges mandate “good” gifts while others exist solely for the laughs. Tamagotchi is good: Check. But a Tamagotchi is also kind of funny, though more whimsical than hilarious: Check. Watch a fellow party guest unwrap a Tamagotchi and their face will light up in recognition and delight. They may even exclaim giddily that they didn’t know they still made these things

“Oh, they definitely do,” you’ll say. “And I’ve bought one for every holiday gift exchange.”

source: cnet.com