What a prefect place for rainy day !!! This place is really big !! I love the way they separate in different age group Ice pop is good deal from 0.75 to 2 euro Really good deal for parents and children
Carnley P.
Tu valoración: 4 Pacifica, CA
Perfect rainy day place to bring your active tots. A good dose of danger and excitement balanced with padded play areas, ball pits, and bouncy houses. Free wi-fi, and comfortable seating for the parents. Food is so-so, and I’m with Austin C.- a nice West Coast IPA would make this place all the better!
Viki N.
Tu valoración: 2 Amsterdam, The Netherlands
I’ve biked past this place dozens of times and never knew it was there. I think that was for the better. Now that I have an 18-month-old, I’m told this is a great place for kids. To that I reply, it’s a great place for *exhausting* kids, and their parents. It’s probably best for kids who are between 5 – 10 years old, because they can run around on their own and don’t require constant parental supervision. Me and a friend came here with our 18-month olds, and we had to spend the entire time running behind them to make sure they didn’t hurt themselves in the play area meant for 0 – 4 year olds. Everything is just a little too steep — the angle of the slides that cause your child’s heels to hit the ground suddenly and pitch their little faces forward onto the mat, the puffy staircase-like things that go up 20-something feet in the air that your child can lose control on and slide down really fast and come to a sudden landing at the bottom, and which lead up to a platform that has a sudden drop in it as soon as you get to the top, like 3 feet down, so if you’re 18-month falls down there they can’t get back up again without you lifting them up. Oh and did I mention that the top of this platform has no lighting? So here you are with a pit on your left, super steep puffy steps behind you, and two horizontal puffy rollers positioned around knee height to stuff yourself through on your right so you can crawl through some other obstacles in the darkness beyond before you round the corner and get to a dangerously high slide to get back down to the ground. And if you go down the pit to your left there’s another pit going down from that pit, and that pit has another pit off of that one, and down it goes all the way to the ground. I have no idea how adults are expected to stuff themselves in this compressed zig-zag, but you kind of have to if you want to rescue your child. I have had childhood nightmares about being trapped in weird vertical mazes like this. I don’t want to pay 8,50 to experience it in my free time. But at least they have food. Nothing fancy, just basic stuff like tostis and paninis and waffles, poffertjes, ice cream bars, coffee and juice. There are signs posted saying that you can’t eat food brought in from the outside, but when I was there all the parents with little kids were feeding them stuff they brought from home and nobody bothered them. I guess it makes sense, since a real little kid needs something softer and easier to eat than tostis. I had a children’s tosti and it was the typical Dutch tosti with two pieces of dry bread and barely any cheese and a slice of ham in between. The place used to be a car tunnel 12 years ago, and it still feels like one. There is hardly any sunlight, and it has that faint odor of gasoline, motor oil, and urine. Plus everything in the place is made from bolted together modular poles, platforms, and netting, wrapped in soft cushioning which is wrapped in plastic ties to keep the cushioning from being pulled off. There are no permanent structures other than the food area, and that is also shoddily built. It was like some guys threw together a bunch of play structures as quickly and cheaply as possible, and then left it that way. For 12 years. I just got such a weird feeling from this place. I would rather take my child anywhere outside than come here again, because outside you have sun, and fresh air. Here you have balls. Lots of balls. My little girl got obsessed with the ball pit hut, to the point where she didn’t want to leave to eat or take her nap or anything. Beware ball pit addiction! But after a few hours she left exhausted, as did me and my friend and her baby. So if you’re looking for an unusual place to get a work out, this is the place to go.
Austin C.
Tu valoración: 5 San Diego, CA
Tons of stuff for kids to do, and the greatest CMPSI(Cute Moms Per Square Inch) of any other place in town. Food is what you’d expect when you ate eating underground I’m your socks: euro bowling alley neo kitch. Would be nice: a West Coast IPA on tap for father, a la The Station in the South Park neighborhood of San Diego.
Fraeul
Tu valoración: 5 München, Bayern
TunFun noch nicht in der deutschen Version von Qype? Das kann ja gar nicht sein. Ich kann allen Amsterdam-Urlaubern mit Kids den Besuch im TunFun nur ans Herz legen. Es handelt sich dabei um einen Indoor-Spielplatz in einem ehemaligen Tunnel, der sehr weitläufig ist. Es gibt große Kletter– und Turnbereiche, die nach Altersgruppen unterteilt sind. Dadurch muss man nicht ständig aufpassen, dass die Mäuse von den Großen etwas abbekommen oder auf den Kleinen rumtrampeln. Für Eltern gibt es einen großen Sitzbereich(mit Bierbänken) und anschließendem kleinem SB-Bistro. Alle Getränke und Speisen(von denen es ohnehin eher nur kleinere Snacks gibt) sind preislich absolut günstig, weswegen ich es auch vollkommen in Ordnung finde, dass keine eigenen Lebensmittel und Getränke mitgebracht werden dürfen. Der Eintritt kostet für Kinder bis 127,50 Euro für den ganzen Tag.(Geöffnet bis 18 Uhr, die Kasse schließt allerdings um 17 Uhr) Erwachsene zahlen nichts. Perfekt. Daneben sei noch erwähnt, dass TunFun hervorragend mit den öffentlichen Verkehrsmitteln zu erreichen ist und zwischen Waterlooplein und dem jüdischen Museum auch für die Stunden davor oder danach eine optimale Lage bietet.