If you’ve ever battled crowds to get a coveted toy you know that early October is the perfect time for parents to start holiday shopping. Amazon knows this, which is why the company is holding a second Prime Day sale event—which ends tonight—featuring some great Prime Day toy deals. You can find all the best Prime Day deals here. But if your kids are like my kids, they’re already working on their wish lists. If you say you haven’t already started budgeting, you are either lying, financially irresponsible, or your children are much less demanding than mine are (I know, it’s my fault).
We test and write about toys year-round, cross-reference our own recommendations, and then use price-tracking software to make sure what we’re recommending is actually a good deal. These are all toys that we, and our kids, have tested and loved. You need an Amazon Prime membership to get the Prime Day deal price, but you can sign up for a free trial, and Prime offers plenty of perks.
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Toy Deals
Photograph: Particula
If you have a kid who is easily frustrated, then I can’t recommend the GoCube enough (in fact, I recommended it in our gift guide to Smart STEM Toys). A regular Rubik’s Cube just leaves you alone to stew in your own incompetence, but a Bluetooth-connected Rubik’s Cube has glowing edges and a beautiful app to walk you through how to solve one. Once you’ve done that, you can learn all the different algorithms to get your solve time down, and even compete with friends! This price is for the gift pack with the charging stand, cable, and carrying pouch so your kid can even play with it on the car ride home.
Prime Days are always the best time to stock up on Lego sets because the company usually runs a bunch of promotions for around 30 percent off. These bricks are amazing but also expensive (the tolerances are so precise!), so try not to buy them full price, if possible. This is a great price for a basic box of colors. However, if you want to work on a kit, you have a few more options.
It’s seasonal! If you’re taking your kids to a real pumpkin farm this weekend, why not get a Lego one for them to build afterwards? This is a perfect seasonal set with 257 pieces, for kids ages 8 and up.
Photograph: Amazon
This 3D puzzle is one of the best analog gifts. Once completed, the puzzle can be opened 180 degrees to reveal the detailed interior. There are 293 pieces, which should give you a nice, long break from your screens. If the Notre Dame isn’t your favorite beautiful building, there are many other options to choose from, all with overall positive Amazon reviews. —Louryn Strampe
Photograph: Yoto
Multiple friends have purchased the Yoto Player (7/10, WIRED Recommends) so that their kids can play media without having to interact with a screen. The pixelated light-up clock is cute, so it can sit on a nightstand and tell kids when to get up, and you can play audiobooks with insertable cards (you can even create your own content with blank cards). The smaller Yoto Mini ($55) is also on sale.
Photograph: Tonies
This squishy kid’s speaker is great for young kids aged 3 to 7 years because it can withstand drops, spills, and other mishaps. You get five character figures with the speaker (including Spider-Man and Playtime Puppy) and when they are placed on top they trigger related songs or stories. The content is usually under an hour, sometimes much shorter, but you can buy extra characters for all kinds of content, including Paddington Bear, Disney, and Pixar movies. —Simon Hill
Photograph: Kinetic Sand
My children spent a good three to four years totally obsessed with kinetic sand, which is a good return on investment for an affordable stocking stuffer. As my colleague Simon Hill notes (who has similarly obsessed kids), kinetic sand behaves like wet sand, except it looks, feels, and smells nice and isn’t wet. With the caveat that you will have to confine it to a table or play area and/or invest in a robot vacuum, your kid will be able to mold and shape it to their heart’s content.
Photograph: Simon Hill
I’m a big kid and this is one of the best Star Wars gifts I ever got, but any fan will love it. These helmets look good enough to satisfy collectors but are way cheaper than high-end movie replicas, so your kids can play with them. Looks like Amazon has discounts on a bunch of other Black Series helmets, including the Scout Trooper ($72) and The Mandalorian ($70). —Simon Hill
Photograph: Amazon
This clever logic puzzle challenges you to fit Tetris-pieces into a three-dimensional puzzle board. With 100 3D puzzles that require spatial reasoning and problem-solving skills to beat, this will keep kids aged 8 and up busy for quite a while. They get tougher as you progress, but never too hard. Maker Educational Insights offers a bunch of other brain teasing puzzles specifically for younger kids, including Kanoodle Genius (also on sale). —Simon Hill
Photograph: Amazon
My kids were obsessed with this rock tumbler. (It’s also in our Best STEM Toys guide.) For years, it ran more or less constantly, polishing all the little rocks that they filled their pockets with on our hikes and river walks. It doesn’t feel like a toy, despite the packaging and the affordable price.
This was also in our STEM Toys guide before it got replaced with fresher picks. Nevertheless, my daughter used this for several years (we bought ours in 2022). We may have to upgrade to a nicer 3D printer soon, but as a first- and second-grader, she really loved being able to create her own tiny flower gardens and spoons for her stuffies.
Regardless of how much my Furby creeped me out as a kid back in the 90s, I believe owning one is a rite of passage. This is the latest version, which comes with over 600 responses, color-changing lights, dance moves, and more. It also comes with voice activation, which unlocks five different commands (without the need to connect to the internet). —Brenda Stolyar
If you remember these digital pets from the ’90s you might fancy giving one to your kid. Let them get a taste of what it’s like to care for something, feed, clean, and play with it, and never get any thanks! Be warned, though, when I got one for my daughter, she started insisting I look after it when she was at school. —Simon Hill
Gaming Deals
Photograph: Simon Hill
Originally called Settlers of Catan, this immersive strategy game is all about gathering and trading resources to build roads, settlements, and cities on a randomly generated board of hexagonal tiles. To collect enough points for a victory requires the right strategy and some luck with dice rolls. My kids love the trading and the robber mechanic, which allows you to steal cards from your opponents and block their resources (though it can cause fall outs). The game is perfect for three or four players and usually lasts around an hour. There are various expansions and a new version called Catan: New Energies (7/10, WIRED Recommends) if you ever want more. —Simon Hill
If I were to guess where my anxiety disorder stems from, I’d point back to this game. The whole point is to make your way past different obstacles to get to the fridge for a midnight snack, without waking up Dad—all of which depends on the amount of times you click the included alarm clock. Since it’s randomized, you’re holding your breath hoping he won’t shoot up out of bed and send you back to your room. —Brenda Stolyar
Photograph: Amazon
If you just can’t get enough of Catan (formerly known as Settlers of Catan), and now your kids want to join in, there is now a junior version for kids as young as 5. Your swashbuckling kindergartener can learn how to trade with—and rob—people by playing as miniature pirates on the high seas. They will also learn how to argue. A lot.