Theme & Amusement Parks in Patchogue
Theme & Amusement Park Deals
Inline 1 Extreme Skatepark
- Mount Sinai
Sock-footed little ones frolic through a fun park, inflatable dinosaur habitats, and giant slides as attendants keep watch
Kangaroo Kids Inflatable Party Center
- Deer Park
Open access to a world of inflatable tunnels, foam slides, and bouncy floors
Wood Kingdom
- Farmingdale
5,000 sq. ft. indoor playground enchants kids with 3 bouncers, climbing structure, slides, and separate snack area with juice and cookies
Long Island's Laser Bounce
- Levittown
Multifaceted complex fosters friendly competition in laser tag, bounce arena, and Ballocity arena
Spins Bowl Grand Prix New York
- Mount Kisco
Adults, kids, and teenagers race around go-kart tracks at speeds of up to 40 mph, then go head to head in the video-game arcade
Baseball Plus
- Freeport
Full-swing golf simulator digitally re-creates more than 50 world-famous courses down to the traps, trees & ball-swiping turtles
Inplayables
- Queens
Sock-clad little ones safely romp through and climb over inflatable bounce houses and slides to expel extra energy.
Recommended Theme & Amusement Parks by Groupon Customers
Settle traffic arguments by challenging an opposing driver to a duel on Boomers!'s speedy go-carts. Or just cruise solo, banking curves and outdriving total strangers in a wild day of rubber-burning and dust-eating. For crashtastic thrills, climb aboard a bumper boat and drift on the waterscape, floating amok and gleefully broadsiding fellow captains. A bit of the briny seeps into Boomers!'s mini-golf range, where it creates a sparkling blue hazard to complement the verdant greens. Finish the day with a feeling of accomplishment that comes only from climbing Boomers!'s big, giant rock wall. The 32-foot climbing surface has a variety of handholds and different climbing options, so explore them all with the three climbs. Be sure to check Boomers! Medford's hours before heading out.
With whirling colorful lights and a top-40 playlist, Roller Kingdom could give visitors the illusion that they're in a nightclub. But instead of dancing on the floor, guests strap on rollerblades or roller skates to glide across it. Novice skaters can improve their form during lessons or trade in their skates for laser-tag equipment and duel it out with friends in order to win prize tickets and the right to wear a homemade laser-tag championship belt made out of tinfoil. Outside the rink and laser-tag den, guests can play arcade games or belt out their favorite songs on the karaoke stage.
The phosphorescent indoor landscape at Monster Mini Golf immerses putters in an eerie universe that inverts the sun-soaked cheer of conventional courses. Rimmed in glowing barriers, 18 holes lure swingers of all sizes to challenge their coordination and resolve in the face of winged monsters, scowling animated trees, a creepy clown, and their opponents' shockingly dazzling smiles. Sheltered from searing rain and howling wind, the indoor course enables play around hazards such as a spell well and luminous, ghostly windmill at any time of the year. An in-house radio station and DJ mask the sound of pounding hearts with lively beats and course commentary, and golfers looking for additional glory can win prizes by participating in regular contests or at the on-site arcade.
When you think you’ve walked as far east as you can go at the Long Island Aquarium, keep walking, and you’ll enter the realm of the adjacent Long Island Exhibition Center. Recent exhibitions include the Butterflies and Birds! display, which gathers more different species of butterflies and multiple types of birds, as well as archerfish for a stunning and vivid exhibit set to a storybook theme. Much like a larva’s youth, the exhibit isn’t permanent, but Executive Director Bryan DeLuca comments, “…Even though the exhibit will only be on display for a limited engagement, we encourage visitors to linger as long as they like while they can."
In 1976, educator, musician, and kinesiologist Robin Wes longed for a children's gym that prioritized personal growth over competition. Unveiled at a time when physical-education classes pushed students to focus almost exclusively on winning, Robin's program was swiftly adopted and is now used in more than 300 Little Gyms worldwide. Robin still pens original music to accompany lessons, which engage whippersnappers aged 4 months to 12 years with gymnastics, dance, karate, and parent and child activities.
Each of The Little Gym's classes introduces simple movements that sharpen motor skills and set brains whirring, allowing kids to progress at their own pace until they can finally build a computer out of macaroni and glitter. Staff members strive to build a base for lifelong social skills and self-assurance with each exercise, including activities rooted purely in fun, such as summer camps or birthday parties, which helped The Little Gym to earn title of #1 Birthday Chain in Parents Magazine.
After the birth of his third son, Jerry Petrini opened his own family fun center. Within 20 years, the space expanded into what My Three Sons Family Fun Center is today: a 22,000-square-foot family entertainment center that now employs his three sons and daughter. There, local youngsters descend from the two-level soft-play gym for a ride on the real working train below, fire 16 pedestal-mounted air cannons at targets in the black-lit balladium arena, and pursue opponents through the laser-tag arena flooded with fog imported from London. The mining expedition's thousands of balls in a wall-length trough conceal bounty that grants guests entry into the cave treasure room, where kids open chests growing on trees to obtain the redemption tickets inside. More than 100 games and video simulators dispense additional tickets for prizes, and the center's in-house pizzeria revitalizes visitors with slices of its old family recipe made from scratch.
