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'Stop beeping!' Today's kids react to original '90s Tamagotchi pets

Remember how you doted on your pixelated pet who needed your constant love and attention? Watch today's kids try out Tamagotchi toys and question our love for these beeping creatures.

Bonnie Burton
Journalist Bonnie Burton writes about movies, TV shows, comics, science and robots. She is the author of the books Live or Die: Survival Hacks, Wizarding World: Movie Magic Amazing Artifacts, The Star Wars Craft Book, Girls Against Girls, Draw Star Wars, Planets in Peril and more! E-mail Bonnie.
Bonnie Burton
2 min read
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Watching kids get irritated by the constant beeping from needy Tamagotchi pets is very entertaining.

Video screenshot by Bonnie Burton/CNET

BEEP! BEEP! BEEP! Some of us still have fond, or in most cases frustrating, flashbacks of our needy Tamagotchi pet. It would beep all hours of the day and night, reminding us to feed it, play with it and pick up its poop.

The electronic toy, made by Japanese company Bandai in the late '90s, was a keychain-size virtual pet. Tamagotchis were supposed to be adorable aliens who needed our constant love and attention, or they would die.

In the latest "Kids React" video by new-media production duo Benny and Rafi Fine, also known as The Fine Brothers, children aged 7-12 play with the same Tamagotchi electronic toys we loved and hated.

Some of the kids immediately thought the low-fi creature was cute while others weren't impressed with the design.

"It's so pixellated!" Brooke Monae, age 10, said in the video published Thursday.

Once the Fine Brothers explained how to play with their Tamagotchi pet, the kids fed electro critters to keep them from getting too hungry.

"Yay! I feel so accomplished," Sydney, age 10, said.

The kids were clearly unimpressed when they found out there's only one game, guessing if their pet would move right or left, on the first Tamagotchi.

"Doesn't this get tiring after awhile?" Krischelle, age 11, asked.

Not surprising, once the Tamagotchi's signature beeping started, the kids were immediately irked by the constant noise. They were even more shocked to learn that the toy would often beep to wake up its owner in the middle of the night when it needed something.

"I want to live my life, not take care of this thing," Kelis, age 9, said.

Of course, kids that didn't take care of their Tamagotchis learned the hard way that the electronic pets would die.

"If you don't play it often enough it could die? And that's a game for kids?" Kacey, age 10, asked.

Past episodes of the "Kids React" series have kids hilariously attempt to figure out how to use a rotary phone, a Walkman cassette player, a vintage Apple computer, an original Nintendo Game Boy and the talking bear toy Teddy Ruxpin.