Stowaway
Snow Tube Set
BEST FOR
Snow day fun
Face-planting in the
snow at 20 mph isn’t
the best way for your
5-year-old to learn
about the joys of winter.
There’s a better way
to sled: tubing in this
lightweight air dough-
nut. With a one-minute
inflate time, even the
most impatient little
nipper (or parent) won’t
have time to grumble.
$179, llbean.com
The One
Smart Piano
BEST FOR
Low-key learning
Mrs. Crabapple, you’ve
been replaced by a
digital teacher that lets
users of all skill lev-
els check out games,
video lessons, and
sheet music with an
iOS or Android device.
Light-up keys and built-
in MP3 speakers that
work with Pandora,
Spotify, and other apps
make it party-ready.
$300, smartpiano.com
Lego Technic Porsche 911 GT3 RS
BEST FOR
A mid-teen crisis
Tackling this 2,704-piece Lego hot rod could help
you gain traction with your teen. The 1:8 scale
model includes a working gearbox, adjustable
spoiler, and flat 6 engine with moving pistons. Not
included: the growl of a Porsche and the patience
for an eight-hour build. $300, shop.lego.com
Lego Technic Porsche 911 GT3 RS
BEST FOR
A mid-teen crisis
Cozmo, the Smart Bot
BEST FOR
Families with pet allergies
Rec robots, it seems, didn’t
evolve much after Sony’s Aibo
dogs—until now. Meet Cozmo,
the brainchild of animators, video
game designers, roboticists,
and artificial intelligence experts.
Cozmo plays games, shows
emotion, interacts with the envi-
ronment, and becomes more of
a “person” the more you play with
him. (Facial recognition software
helps him build bot/human rela-
tionships.) This Wall-E wannabe
has no parts to assemble and
needs only a compatible iOS or
Android device, so you—uh, your
kid—can have a new pal straight
out of the box. $180, anki.com
TREATS FOR
LITTLE GEEKS
Teach the basics
of coding under the
guise of gaming.
BLOXELS
Imagine assembling
a Super Mario–style
obstacle course using
Lego-type blocks, and
then uploading and
actually playing the
13-bit level yourself on
your phone or tablet.
That’s the idea behind
Bloxels, one of the cool-
est and most hands-on
ways to let your kids
play god inside their
own video game. $50,
bloxelsbuilder.com
OSMO
The Osmo system has
a range of games for
children. In Coding,
kids snap together a
series of blocks, each
representing simple
commands like “run,”
“jump,” and “touch.”
Then Awbie, a video
game character on
an iPad screen (yes,
you need an iPad),
responds to these real-
world commands as
they help him hunt for
strawberries and other
objects. $145 for the
set, playosmo.com
SPHERO SPRK+
This little ball comes
armed with infinite pos-
sibilities. Download
the companion Light-
ning Lab app and your
kids can easily program
the scratch-resistant,
waterproof orb to per-
form hundreds of cus-
tom tasks—everything
from swimming across
a pool to navigating a
simple maze. $130,
store.sphero.com
illo tk
GoPro Karma
BEST FOR
Making badass memories
Karma is the first full-featured drone that’s
truly packable. The rotor arms collapse neatly
(blades still attached), and because the GoPro
camera sits in line with the body instead of
beneath it, the legs are shorter and can retract
for transport. The entire rig fits into a slim
backpack. Karma’s neatest trick? You can
detach the three-axis gimbal that stabilizes the
camera and mount it on a hand grip (included)
for ultrasmooth terrestrial videos.
From $800, gopro.com