The Hot New Toy For Christmas is...

My DD will be 9 in November. She's asked for a Nintendo DS specifically so she can get the Nintendogs game. She also wants an Accoustic guitar and guitar lessons. She also mentioned the Fly Pen (if it's the one that mimics what you write on the page). Between her birthday and Christmas, she'll probably end up with all these items although I hesistate to buy another Nintendo since she already has a Gameboy (that she plays with quite often). We'll also probably buy her guitar lessons but will rent the guitar rather than buying it. She likes My Scene dolls better than Bratz (although both are "tarty" as another poster put it). She had an older version of Furby that I could only get on ebay during the first craze. Even though she's mentioned wanting another, she won't be getting it - barely played with the first one. She's still a stuffed animal freak, but she has so many we're bursting at the seems. Books are always a great idea and we always get her several for Christmas. CDs are another great gift, but DD has informed me she's too old, cool whatever for Kids Bop etc. Has to be the real artists. I may get her the latest version of "NOW" that's what I call music #___. Hope this helps the poster who asked for ideas for a 9 year old.
 
Pooh_Friend#1 said:
Thank you for all the great ideas. I didn't think of limited too gc but they LOVE clothes, I was thinking og Build-a-Bear, but they already have so many stuffed animals. They really don't play with dolls...maybe we will have to go shopping for christmas ideas this weekend!!!!! Any new board games out there for 9 year olds that are popular?


Build a Bear gift cards are extremely popular with my DD (who turns 9 in November), but I limit her to buying clothes/accesories only. No more making stuffed animals! Her favorite board games are Scene-It (Disney version and Jr. version - got them both a year ago and still plays them often). She also loves the classics Life and Monopoly, and we have the Haunted Mansion version of Clue that she enjoys. She loves Ltd Too clothes, but isn't so into fashion that she'd choose clothes over toys quite yet. We get a lot of Ltd. Too clothes passed on by friends with older girls; otherwise I don't regularly shop there (too pricey for what you get IMO, unless you hit a really good sale).
 
gottaluvdis said:
Her favorite board games are Scene-It (Disney version and Jr. version - got them both a year ago and still plays them often). She also loves the classics Life and Monopoly, and we have the Haunted Mansion version of Clue that she enjoys.
Does she play with the kid version or the adult version of Monopoly and Life? My DBF and I play games with the girls but am not sure if they could handle the adult version of Monopoly yet. Also, what is scene it? How do you play it?
 
My DD's aren't getting much this Christmas. I am surprising them with the Disney trip, and we are going to Splash Lagoon in PA the day after Christmas. I do was to get my DD (9) a computer, a new bike(she outgrew her last one) and the new Firefly Cell Phone, and my other DD(5) is really into polly pockets so she will get a few of them. Maybe soeme clothes for the both of them and that is it. I promised DH if we could go to WDW, then we would have a VERY light Christmas. Have fun shopping everyone!!
 

My almost 9 years old daughter wants a Fly Pen, Disney Scene-It, Mall Madness Board Game, Dream Life (plugs into the TV), the Aly & AJ CD, and books -- American Girl, RL Stine, Shel Silverstein, Wayside School, and more. The board games that she already has and plays with often are Trouble, Sorry, Clue and Cadoo. In fact, Cadoo is very popular and I know there are some new Cranium games out which we'll probably get for the family. These are great!!!
 
I haven't read this whole thread so forgive me if this has already been mentioned. I heard on a radio program the other night that by november there should be a laptop out for kids for about $100. Anyone else hear this?

ETA: I googled it, here is the story.



By BRIAN BERGSTEIN, AP Technology Writer
Wed Sep 28, 9:01 PM ET



CAMBRIDGE, Mass. - The $100 laptop computers that Massachusetts Institute of Technology researchers want to get into the hands of the world's children would be durable, flexible and self-reliant.


The machines' AC adapter would double as a carrying strap, and a hand crank would power them when there's no electricity. They'd be foldable into more positions than traditional notebook PCs, and carried like slim lunchboxes.

For outdoor reading, their display would be able to shift from full color to glare-resistant black and white.

And surrounding it all, the laptops would have a rubber casing that closes tightly, because "they have to be absolutely indestructible," said Nicholas Negroponte, the MIT Media Lab leader who offered an update on the project Wednesday.

Negroponte hatched the $100 laptop idea after seeing children in a Cambodian village benefit from having notebook computers at school that they could also tote home to use on their own.

Those computers had been donated by a foundation run by Negroponte and his wife. He decided that for kids everywhere to benefit from the educational and communications powers of the Internet, someone would have to make laptops inexpensive enough for officials in developing countries to purchase en masse. At least that's Negroponte's plan.

Within a year, Negroponte expects his nonprofit One Laptop Per Child to get 5 million to 15 million of the machines in production, when children in Brazil, China, Egypt, Thailand, South Africa are due to begin getting them.

In the second year — when Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney hopes to start buying them for all 500,000 middle and high-school students in this state — Negroponte envisions 100 million to 150 million being made. (He boasts that these humble $100 notebooks would surpass the world's existing annual production of laptops, which is about 50 million.)

While a prototype isn't expected to be shown off until November, Negroponte unveiled blueprints at Technology Review magazine's Emerging Technologies conference at MIT.

Among the key specs: A 500-megahertz processor (that was fast in the 1990s but slow by today's standards) by Advanced Micro Devices Inc. and flash memory instead of a hard drive with moving parts. To save on software costs, the laptops would run the freely available Linux operating system instead of Windows.

The computers would be able to connect to Wi-Fi wireless networks and be part of "mesh" networks in which each laptop would relay data to and from other devices, reducing the need for expensive base stations. Plans call for the machines to have four USB ports for multimedia and data storage.

Perhaps the defining difference is the hand crank, though first-generation users would get no more than 10 minutes of juice from one minute of winding.

This certainly wouldn't be the first effort to bridge the world's so-called digital divide with inexpensive versions of fancy machinery. Other attempts have had a mixed record.

With those in mind, Negroponte says his team is addressing ways this project could be undermined.

For example, to keep the $100 laptops from being widely stolen or sold off in poor countries, he expects to make them so pervasive in schools and so distinctive in design that it would be "socially a stigma to be carrying one if you are not a student or a teacher." He compared it to filching a mail truck or taking something from a church: Everyone would know where it came from.

As a result, he expects to keep no more than 2 percent of the machines from falling into a murky "gray market."

And unlike the classic computing model in which successive generations of devices get more gadgetry at the same price, Negroponte said his group expects to do the reverse. With such tweaks as "electronic ink" displays that will require virtually no power, the MIT team expects to constantly lower the cost.

After all, in much of the world, Negroponte said, even $100 "is still too expensive."
 
I actually went to Walmart to buy the Fisher Price Star Station for my 3.5 neice for Christmas. I have to agree that the songs are not toddler type songs. They were top 40 type songs. I was really disappointed as I thought she would of loved this. However, right across the aisle I seen a really neat Playskool toy/game for about the same price- so I got that. It looks something like a larger version of Bullseye Ball- I can't wait to play it!!
 
/
My 12 year old wanted and just got a
YO STICK.

It is really cool. My nephews will be getting one for Christmas, unless their birthday comes first!

They have been hard to get at our TRU.
 
On Regis and Kelly yesterday, Family Fun had their top 10 toys of the year:

Family Fun Magazine's kid-tested TOY AWARDS

#10 Card Kit, American Girl $10

#9 Nylint Rock Crawler, Funrise $150

#8 Pyrates Dread Eye�s Phantom, Mega Bloks $50

#7 Go Go TV, Toy Quest $60

#6 Darth Vader Voice Changer, Hasbro $30

#5 Slurpee Drink Maker, Spin Master $30

#4 ChatNow, Tiger Electronics $75

#3 Shake �N Go! Speedway, Fisher-Price $40

#2 3D Pool Table, Zocker Toys $130

#1 Knights� Empire Castle, Playmobil $180

The Go Go TV looked really neat! I will have to get that for me, oh, I mean, my kids. LOL!!
 
>>YO STICK

They have been hard to get at our TRU.<<

See this is what I find fun to watch- Toys that are hard to get nationwide but not at my store- I think we've sold 2-3 in 6 weeks....

-em
 
This is a great thread. I get some good ideas from everyone. My DD4 also wants the Amazing Amanda Doll. I did see it at Target the other day for $99.99. I was going to wait to see if it went on sale but I may need to break down and get it early if it is going to be hard to find. (My parents get a 10% discount at Target cuz my Dad retired from there, so that will help) My DS6 thinks the FLY by Leapfrog also looks cool (as do I) but he is a bit young for it. I watched the presentation on QVC and it shows for ages 8 and up. I think I am going to be getting both of them the new Video Now players that are out that you can watch shows and play games with. Thought that would be good for the plane ride to Disney (which is also part of their Christmas Gift -they don't know we are going). I was at TRU the other day and had a whole section of Cinderella stuff - very fun. Other than that I am just kind of waiting to see all the new fun stuff they come out with for the holidays.
 
I forgot about those shake and go racers. Those looked really neat. MY ds also wants one of those little skee-ball looking things from playschool.
 
Go Go TV is this new interactive video game where there is a small camera that sets on the top of your TV and then you put in a video game, such as balloon drop (there were three others and I guess there are other cartridges) and it show balloons dropping and your kids have to stand in front of the TV and pop them. The balloons kept coming faster as the game progressed and Kelly really had to move to pop them. It looked hilarious, but I am sure Kelly was probably trying to look that way, but my thoughts were what a great way of excercising in the winter months!! For my whole family, because I am sure my kids would get a bang out of watching their mom and dad frantically waving their arms in the air. I wish I would have saw more of the games, but I was sold just watching the one game. Hopefully, I will not be disappointed.
 
GOGO TV is just like Playstations EYETOY. You dont need PS2, just they GOGO Console. YOu need to purchase other games for it seperately, they are 19.99 each.
 
Am I the only one? All my DS (8) wants are XBOX games. Well, he wants a dirt bike too, but...
 
Today at TRU my 3 1/2 year had a blast playing with the plug and play tv games. Packman, race car, etc.

The age on the joy stick said 5 and up. Has anyone had any experience with this and an under 5 child? He really like it but I don't want to buy one and have him totally frustrated with it.
 
d4est said:
Am I the only one? All my DS (8) wants are XBOX games. Well, he wants a dirt bike too, but...

My DS 8 asked for a guitar, Air Hogs Avenger, and a gameboy game. He's hard to buy for because he really would rather play outside with friends than with toys. then he decided he didn't want the Air Hogs for Christmas because the weather would be too bad for him to play with it outside, but he loves anything RC. I already bought him the guitar, pajamas, and a dinosaur thing, I think I'm getting him a bowling ball, too, since he joined a league this year. It really seems to get harder to buy for them as they get older.
 
I got DH the plug and play a couple years ago that has pac man, pong, etc. My just barely 4 year old loves it. She had a hard time with it for about a week but then just got it.

Holly
 

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