
All Aboard the Retro Express: Krankenwagen Collectible Toys Retro Hunt in Tassie 🚂🎮
There’s retro hunting, and then there’s retro hunting on an old train carriage—and I can confidently tell you, the latter wins in pure novelty factor, hands down.
Last week, the Ausretrogamer crew piled into a hire car (real-world, not pixelated), braved Tassie’s weather, and made our pilgrimage to Krankenwagen Collectible Toys in Margate, Tasmania. The journey, the finds, the vibes — it was everything a retro nerds like us dreams of. Grab your favourite drink, tune up your nostalgia receptors, and come along for the ride.
Setting the Scene: Margate + Krankenwagen
Margate is the kind of beach-side small town that feels like it whispers secrets of simpler times. You know — the kind of place where a store like Krankenwagen feels like it belongs. The moment we stepped inside, it felt like walking into a time capsule: shelves groaning with collectible cards, boxed Star Wars action figures with that faint whiff of “classics,” and cases of vintage toys waiting to be rediscovered.
If you peek at their Insta feed (@krankenwagen_toys), you’ll see exactly what we’re talking about — a glorious mix of old school toys, retro display cases, quirky memorabilia, and enough charm to make you forget whether you’re in 1989 or 2025.


Choo-Choo: The Train-Carriage Factor
Now, here’s the kicker: parts of the shop (or the shopping experience) are housed in an old train carriage. Yes. A literal carriage. Can’t get more novel than that.
That mix of tactile-old-world infrastructure and fuzzy nostalgia from retro games is just electric. As you step from platform to “aisle,” your brain does a little flip: “Am I boarding a steam train or browsing Sega cartridges?” It’s a juxtaposition that works so well — the rails, the wood, the creaks — they all add character to the hunt. It feels less like a shop, and more like treasure-hunting in a bygone era.



The Thrill of the Hunt
One of my favourite games is always “Spot the Holy Grail.” At Krankenwagen, we played it hard.
- Vintage toys and figurines cheekily interspersed between gaming gear — making you pause and look twice.
The staff (who clearly eat, sleep, and breathe nostalgia) were generous with their time and stories. They told us about how certain pieces arrived (trades, collections, forgotten stashes), and that sense of curatorial care just elevated the whole vibe. These aren’t mere goods — these are pieces of our collective childhood, curated and preserved.



Highlights & Personal Best Finds
Here are a few standouts from my haul (and pictures):
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OG Masters Of The Universe and She-Ra — oh how these take us back to the 80s!
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Aliens action figures — hard to find action figures from the awesome Aliens movie – let’s rock!
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Mini display diorama — a little corner shelf where toys and games blended in such a perfect “museum of the everyday” way.
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Train-themed retro decor — small signage, rails motifs, old crates — it all tied back to that train-carriage charm.



Why This Place Matters (More Than Just Coolness)
Beyond “cool store in a train carriage,” Krankenwagen embodies something deeper that resonates with us retro gamers:
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Preservation of Play
When consoles and old toys get dusty and labels fade, stores like this keep the flame alive. They give us a place to touch, test, and remember. -
Community Roots
It’s not about flipping retro stuff for profit (though they do business). It’s about connecting collectors, nurturing nostalgia, and welcoming new enthusiasts into the fold. -
Local Connection
In Tasmania, having a shop like this isn’t just nice — it’s vital. You don’t have to rely purely on online auctions or interstate postage. You can walk in, chat, test, hold — and form a memory. -
Experience over Transaction
The train carriage, the layout, the smell, the conversations — these aren’t extras. They are central to why you’ll remember this place years later.



Tips for Future Retro Hunters in Tassie
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Go before lunch — you’ll beat the crowd, get better pickings, and soak in the ambiance unhurried.
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Bring all your spare cash (or credit card) — some gems might not be bargained to ship.
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Ask questions — staff often know backstories and hidden corners.
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Don’t be shy — pick up, inspect, open boxes (ask first if allowed).
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Time it with surroundings — Margate and nearby spots make for great side adventures (coffee, pancakes, coastal walks, vintage shops).


Final Thoughts
Our trek to Krankenwagen in Margate was more than “just another store stop.” It was a time-warped adventure, with laughter, wide eyes, and that familiar throb of nostalgia. Combining retro hunting with the novelty of browsing in a train carriage elevated it from “fun day out” to something we’ll talk about among our collector friends for years.
So if you’re ever in Tasmania and your retro senses start tingling, get yourself to Margate. Let that carriage creak beneath your steps, let your fingers brush over faded labels, and indulge — just a little — in the magic of retro.

















