Theme & Amusement Parks in Burleson
Theme & Amusement Park Deals
Pump It Up of Fort Worth
- Ridgmar
Tykes enjoy 5 or 10 pop-in play sessions in indoor inflatable playgrounds in a clean, climate-controlled environment
Mountasia Family Fun Center
- North Richland Hills
Family fun park boasts two 18-hole mini-golf courses with real water hazards and go-kart course with tandem karts for younger riders
Let's Jump
- Fort Worth
Kids bounce in 12,000-square-foot facility with 13 inflatables; party package includes unlimited play time and 45 minutes in private room
Urban Air Trampoline Park
- Southlake
24,000 sq. ft. of wall-to-wall trampolines fuels sky-soaring bouts of open jump play and bounce-based sports
DFW Adventure Park
- Justin-Roanoke
Cruise down four 230- to 400-foot ziplines hanging 30–40 feet above the ground or compete against teams in a 1.5-mile obstacle race
Indoor Safari Park Dallas
- Flower Mound
Tropical murals adorn walls, and giggling children scramble up safe jungle gyms, ride mechanical animals, and hop onboard colorful trains
Zone Action Park
- Lewisville
Selection of go-kart tracks accommodates drivers as young as 3, whereas two themed 18-hole courses host mini-golf competition
Hydrous Wake Park
- Multiple Locations
Cable systems pull wakeboarders around lakes at speeds of up to 18 mph
Strikz Entertainment
- Frisco
This bowling center, open until at least midnight every night, boasts 32 bowling lanes with computerized scoring and automatic bumpers
Putt-Putt Entertainment - Ft. Worth
- Fort Worth
Fun seekers play across a foliage-surrounded mini-golf course, hit homers in batting cages, and feed tokens into arcade games
BounceU Plano
- Plano
Climate-controlled room filled with inflatable structures, slides, games, and laughing kids
Recommended Theme & Amusement Parks by Groupon Customers
SpeedZone Dallas is the place for racing, games and more.
Attractions such as miniature golf, batting cages, and laser tag make Adventure Landing an ideal location for getting in fun, interactive family time. Whether the kids opt for a heart-accelerating whip around the go-kart track or a few swings of the bat, the fun center gives families every excuse to band together or square off against one another in friendly competition. School, church, and corporate outings are available as well, giving groups of all ages a place to gather, nosh on pizza, and create complex victory dances.
For the past 20 years, Zero Gravity has been one of Dallas’ primary sources of satisfied screams, launching Texans into lower orbit with palpitating rides that test the confines of physics. Thrill-seekers can exhaust adrenaline reserves on five hair-raising attractions, including the seven-story bungee jump, the Skycoaster, and the Texas Blastoff, which acts like a giant slingshot that rockets riders 70 miles per hour toward the sky the nearest medieval watchtower. Nothin’ but Net sends amusement park goers plummeting on a 130-foot freefall, and the Skyscraper's enormous propellers whip guests around with 4 gees of force before serving up views of the city’s stunning skyline. Thanks to precautions designed specifically for each ride, Zero Gravity boasts a flawless safety record, whereas the park’s flexible schedule jump-starts hearts seven days per week.
An excellent resource for children to acquire new hobbies and meet new friends, Adventure Day Camps includes a full day of exciting escapades on the south side of Lake Grapevine at Meadowmere Park. At camp, young ones aged 4–13 can become reacquainted with the outdoors through a diverse assortment of activities, such as kayaking, archery, fishing, swimming, treasure hunts, target shooting, staring contests with intensely focused owls, nature study, and more. Snacks are provided to replenish the kids’ depleted energy at 10 a.m. and 3:15 p.m.
At Lone Star Gymnastics, each summer day camp boasts a different energetic theme and activity plan. With camp titles such as Splish Splash, Mad Scientist, and Crazy Cooking, the gym aims to expand the campers' interests while maintaining a balance of physical and cranial activities. Enrollment is generally capped around 30 campers, but if more enroll, Lone Star will add instructors to maintain a perfect kid-to-adult weight ratio.
Though the creatures on display at Dinosaur World don’t need much space to roam, plenty of care has been taken to furnish them a comfortable habitat. They peer imposingly from the hillsides of Kentucky, crane their necks up through native trees, and stomp through prairie fields. Although a life-size mammoth or T. rex might be hard to miss, little visitors might still jump with delight at noticing a baby dino suddenly appear from behind a bush. Giant brachiosaurus necks arch high above treetops, while toothy meat-eaters and spiny stegosauruses roam the world below. The fiberglass, steel, and concrete models reach up to 80 feet in length, and are built according to the latest scientific discoveries about what dinosaurs looked like and what styles were trendy in the Mesozoic era.
The first Dinosaur World location was a former alligator farm in Florida and five years later another one was opened in Kentucky. As Swedish-born Christer Svensson began to fill it with statues, he consulted with experts around the world to not only create realistic reptiles but to surround them with fun, educational activities. Kids can sift through sand to find shark’s teeth, gastropod shells, and trilobites in a fossil dig, get to know some lizards a little better on the playground, or examine ancient eggs and raptor claws in the museum.
