WOUND UP

Seattle’s Best Toy Shops for Kids and Adults Alike

It’s all fun and games.

By Seattle Met Staff December 13, 2021

The products listed here were selected by a member of the editorial staff. Should you choose to purchase a product through a link on this page, we may receive an affiliate commission.

Snapdoodle cuts through the supply chain blues. Photo by Amber Fouts.

Archie McPhee

Wallingford

The Madison Square Garden of Seattle novelty shops boasts an impressive collection of inspired creations, like a squishable “stress tardigrade,” “handerpants” (yes, hand underpants), and an Edvard Munch–inspired electronic noisemaker that emits all this year’s pent-up screams for you.

Blue Highway Games

Queen Anne

Support local while supporting local (meta). This shop counts games by Seattle creators like Daily Magic and Flatout Games among its topped-up shelves (and its well-stocked online store: Blue Highway offers curbside pickup and nationwide shipping).

Bootyland Kids

Capitol Hill

Sustainability is the name of the game at this all-family emporium. Everything in its carefully curated inventory—stainless steel nesting lunch box kits, organic wool diaper covers, wooden mixing boards for the tiniest DJs—passes the environmentally conscious criteria set by the hip moms at the helm of this ship.

Clover Toys

Ballard

Earnestly wish modern childhood looked a little more like it did when you were a kid? This shop pretty well sticks to the classics: jump ropes, wooden hairdresser kits, Little Golden books, a whole zoo of plushies. All in a Ballard Blocks boutique that enraptures kids without overwhelming parents.

Curious Kidstuff 

West Seattle

There’s no need to brave a commute off the island to stuff a stocking. But you probably already know that: No self-respecting kid can walk by the toy-filled window of this California Avenue shop, now owned by the masterminds behind Bainbridge Island’s long-standing Calico Toy Shoppe (also worth a visit), without begging to take a closer look.

Golden Age Collectables

Pike Place Market

Located in the depths of Pike Place Market since 1961, Golden Age Collectables is thought to be the oldest comic book shop in the world. Here, each aisle gives way to another just as stocked with age-defying treasures, from a full wall of Everett-born Funko Pop figures to an entire franchise worth of Star Wars paraphernalia to board and party games stacked six shelves high.

Magic Mouse

Pioneer Square

Remember how, as a child, toy store shelves filled with dolls and whirligigs seemed to stretch up and around for miles? True to its name, the vaulted ceilings and toy-brimming walls at this longtime Pioneer Square classic turn that trick of perspective into spellbinding reality.

Mox Boarding House

Ballard, Bellevue

This Ballard-founded sanctuary for tabletop gamers of all ages offers family-friendly classics, RPGs, and stocking stuffer card games. But that world building doesn’t end at retail. A cozy cafe, playing-card light fixtures, and bookable private rooms make Mox as immersive an experience as the ones it sells.

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The pink gorilla pictured here with a retro classic.

Image: Amber Fouts

Pink Gorilla

University District, Chinatown–International District

Fans of retro or niche video games should get acquainted with the gorilla. The U District and C–ID locations specialize in classic, hard-to-find, and imported video games and novelties, with consoles ranging from rare 1980s behemoths to the uber popular Nintendo Switch.

Red Wagon

Madison Park

If the Joneses are three feet tall and currently learning to ride a bike, this is where to keep up with them. Red Wagon stocks traditional toy shop fare alongside coveted trends, from those three-wheel Micro Kickboard scooters zooming down every block to Jellycat soft toys (the Beanie Babies of the twenty-first century, in the best way).

Snapdoodle

Various Locations

This education-oriented toy shop’s Seattle-area locations sneakily supplement both schoolwork and playtime with books about sharks and space, brainteasers disguised as board games, and instruments designed for beginners.

Image: Amber Fouts

 

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