It uses a storybook adventure that allows your girl to design and solve endless coding challenges, plus the set includes interactive pets she can care for. Does your little one like toys that can respond to her? These interactive toy options will fit the bill and keep her engaged and entertained. Most 5-year-old girls are into puppies and kittens, but are they ready for the responsibility?
Thanks to this wonderful robotic toy dog, you can offer a unique opportunity for your girl to play with an interactive toy dog. Your daughter is going to fall in love with this adorable gadget, which is exactly why it has earned its spot on our list of the best toys for 5-year-old girls. At the age of five, most children begin to depict a higher understanding of the world around them, meaning interactive toys are bound to make an impact on their curious and developing minds.
This talking map of the world offers a push-to-talk feature that lets kids learn more than 1, facts about 92 countries. It is an engaging learning experience for any child, but particularly for 5-year-old girls with a curiosity about geography or travel.
Part interactive robot and part stuffed animal, they change color depending on their mood, they have interchangeable wearable tails, and they contain a magnetic power pod that allows your girl to stick her Pixie Belle to her clothing. This one little toy offers something for every girl! If your girl is high-energy or anxious at times, these sensory toys are designed to help her relax, focus and calm down when needed.
Mad Matt-R will have all your kiddos obsessed. This is a great sensory toy and our kids absolutely love it. Besides having a super-fun name, these stretchy, twirlable and squeezable fidget strings offer hours of enjoyment for busy little hands. They stretch from just 8 inches up to ten feet long! Our kids are surrounded by technology these days, and their developing brains are perfectly suited to absorb it.
If your little girl tends to covet your phone and other technology, these toys will make her feel more grown-up with a few tech-y gadgets of her very own. This hands-on learning game will last your girl for many years, as it contains different levels of learning up to age Your little lady can practice her spelling, math, problem-solving, and creativity all while having fun and playing games.
Adult smartwatches have nothing on this adorable version for little girls! It has 55 different digital and analog watch faces so it can be used to learn tell time, and it also comes with two cameras for taking photos and videos. It also comes with free content, like a monster-catcher game, a motion sensor for active play challenges, and a pedometer for step-counting. If your girl likes feeling grown-up, this is definitely one of the best gifts for 5-year-old girls.
This might look like just another toy camera, but it actually takes real digital photographs. Your girl can take selfies, snap photos of her friends, record videos or use the voice-only recorder. Music is great for kids for so many reasons. Do you have a budding performer? This microphone comes loaded with 30 famous songs, but its Bluetooth connection means it can play any song in your Spotify, Apple Music or YouTube library.
The stereo acoustic speakers will make your girl feel like a true star, or she can have fun with the included voice effects that can let her sing in a chipmunk voice and more. The rechargeable battery lasts for up to eight hours of fun. It includes one tambourine, one castanet, one hand drum, two handbells, one maraca, one flute, one wooden block and stick, one wood sounder, and one chime bar with a stick.
It also comes with a handy cotton carrying bag for easy storage or transport. Creating music with international instruments also has the benefit of helping your girl develop her confidence and become open-minded about other cultures across the globe.
At age five, your little girl is starting to develop her own tastes and opinions about everything under the sun — music included! This kid-friendly music player will allow her to play her favorites over and over. Plus, it includes a feature that will play each song in three different styles classical, hip-hop, and rock so she can experiment with different musical traditions.
This music player is also loaded with ten musical learning games that help kids learn letters, numbers, animals, instruments, telling time, and more. It requires two AAA batteries, which are included.
Sure, open-play toys are fun, but sometimes you want a toy with a bit more gadgetry. These toys are all easily operated by little fingers, though they may require some parental setup. This wonderful electronic spray pen is perfect for artwork, decorating, and drawing. The pen has washable watercolor markers along with five templates.
The set includes over 75 pieces in all, including a drill, tape measure, screwdriver, and more, and they are all functional and realistic — while still quite safe. Play as ladies of all ages, including mature models and young kids!
Create outfits for celebrities, design dresses for dolls, or apply cute makeup. Fulfill your wildest shopping dreams without spending a penny. Our games for girls collection features all sorts of licensed dolls and characters. You can play games featuring Barbie and Bratz dolls, and even play with replicas of your own toys! Count down from three performing a drumroll with your hands is encouraged and then have everyone point at who they think would be most likely to do said act.
Whoever has the most fingers pointed at them is out. Go around the circle asking "Who's most likely to…" until all but one person is out.
You can skip the eliminations to make the game last longer. Sit in a circle. Begin with one person saying, "Never have I ever…" and finishing with something they have never done. Traveled to Africa, eaten escargot, and the like all work. If someone has done it, they must hold up one finger; if no one in the group has done it, the person saying "Never have I ever…" must hold up a finger. Continue around the circle until one person has three fingers up: They're out.
This party game can get as racy as you make it, so play carefully and set ground rules ahead of time if grandparents or other conservative guests are involved. Ask the person next to you, "Would you rather…" and include two challenging situations.
After their response, it's their turn to ask the person next to them. Continue until you can't think of any more scenarios. Okay, it's a popular party game for kids, but adults can get in on the fun, too. Set chairs or seat cushions in a circle, facing outward, with enough seating for everyone playing, minus one. Designate one person the music player and have everyone else stand in a circle around the circle of seats.
When the music starts, walk around the seats; when the music ends, everyone must find a seat. Whoever doesn't is out. Remove one more chair and begin again, until two people are fighting for one seat. To make musical chairs more interesting, add your own rules.
Allow people to sit on top of each other as long as their feet are off the floor , for example, or make your own alterations. This game requires an app: The Heads Up! After the 99 cent purchase and download, though, you have hours of entertainment on-hand at all times.
In-app purchases are also available. One person will hold a phone to their forehead, facing out. Everyone else will act out or describe whatever appears on the screen while the person with the phone guesses.
They have one minute to make as many correct guesses as possible, and then the phone goes on to the next person. Categories include animals, movies, public figures and celebrities, and more. For a more cognitive game, play this brain-teaser. Say you're hosting a party, and only people who bring the right contributions are given an invitation.
Pick a secret rule: Typically, everyone must bring something that begins with the same letter as their name, but you can also get more creative with it. Don't tell anyone else your rule. Go around the room and have each person say what they're bringing; you respond to each suggestions with a "Yes, you're invited," or "No, you can't bring that.
An oldie but a goodie: Gather in a circle. Pick one phrase to whisper in the ear of the person next to you—no repeats. That person will whisper what they heard to the person next to them, and so on until the phrase gets back to you.
Prepare to laugh at how distorted it gets. To make it more difficult, play music in the background. Pick three statements to make about yourself: "I have two siblings, I've been to three continents, and I love cats," for example. Two should be true; one should be a lie.
Everyone else must guess which is the lie, and then the next person goes. This is a great getting-to-know-you game; if you're playing with family or friends, pick obscure details to try to trick each other to make it even more fun. Purchase a pack of stickers. This one is a great Christmas party game or Halloween party game, so try to find stickers that suit the occasion. Give everyone one sheet of five to ten stickers or less, depending on the size of the party. This game works best in a party where everyone is mingling, so you can incorporate it easily into your happy hour or neighborhood function.
Each person must discretely place all their stickers on other party guests; the first to use all their stickers wins. If they get caught stickering someone, they must accept a sticker.
At the end of the evening, you can laugh about how sneaky some people are—and wonder at how you ended up with stickers all over your back without even noticing. Place chairs in a circle, using one less than needed. Have everyone take a seat; the one person without a seat must stand in the center of the circle. They'll say, "Mail Call for everyone…" and pick a descriptor, such as "wearing red" or "has a cat. Everyone that descriptor applies to must get up and find a new seat, without retaking their initial seat or moving to the seats next to them.
The person in the middle will also be racing for a chair; whoever is left standing at the end stands in the circle next, and the game continues. Find a deck of cards and a set of spoons. Pieces of candy also work.
Have enough for each player, minus one. Deal four cards to each person playing. One person, the dealer, will keep the remaining deck next to them and draw one card at a time. They will look at the card and trade it out for a card in their hand or pass it along to the person next to them, who will do the same thing. The goal is to collect four of the same card; when that happens, reach for a spoon. When someone spots a spoon missing, they, too, can grab one; whoever is left without a prize at the end is out.
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