1-5 of 5 Answers
My Grandson is 6. Has been playing with them since he was 5. This is a big fad with the elementary school kids right now. Older kids like to play these too.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.Depending on the maturity of the child, I’d say age 6 and over for this game.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.Theoretically 6+, but my 4 year old is obsessed with it, and so are all his friends. There isn't a great deal of negative to it for this age group, the tops themselves break into 3 parts and have a tendency to get lost like legos (AKA you find them at 2 AM by stepping on them). I'd hold off on the cartoon series until they are a little older if you can (but they find it somehow anyway). Again nothing terrible, just dramatic japanimation. The only violence is between spinning tops, but everything is overdramatized. The toys themselves are actually fun and not harmful once you are able to manipulate the tops to put them back together and use the launchers with appropriate fine motor skills. It makes a fun activity that you can sometimes win too. Be aware though: sometimes with obsession inducing toys you will have to put them in an organizing box and put them up so they don't start at 5 in the morning spinning.. and spinning... and spinning.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.If you are referring to Beyblades.. it recommends age 8 and up..use your own discretion, I suppose!
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.Actually, its not a game but kind of a piggy bank with account of sum of coin value which can be entered to it through the coin opening. Every time, a coin is entered through the opening on the cap, its counts the value and display it on the little screen. My kid age 6 enjoys by putting coin to it through that opening since it showing the value of coin and total sum of money entered.
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