Theme & Amusement Parks in Sugar Hill
Theme & Amusement Park Deals
Let's Roll Skate 'n Fun Center
- Cumming
Hardwood rink at a 14,000-square-foot family-fun center with game room and snack area
Superior Play Systems
- Multiple Locations
Interactive showrooms full of playground favorites where youngsters can play on swingsets, trampolines, and basketball courts
BounceU Atlanta
- Kennesaw
Pressurized air erects a palace of inflatables such as slides, obstacle courses, and a giant boxing ring complete with blow-up gloves
Better Baseball
- Marietta
The mechanized arms of pitching machines hurl balls at up to 100 mph as hitters unleash their hardest, fastest swings.
Sparkles Family Fun Center Smyrna
- Smyrna
Pairs of partiers whiz around the glossy rink as popular music thumps and tinted lights dye the space pink and green
Recommended Theme & Amusement Parks by Groupon Customers
A motley collection of secure and sanitized play structures dominates each Catch Air location's indoor play arena to sate the lively imaginations of children as well as the safety concerns of their parents. Each of the four locations opens its doors seven days a week to unique lineups of attractions, including three-tiered castles covered in colorful nets and padding, with space shuttles attached to appease every child's love of anachronism. Tykes 12 and younger can wade through ball pits or take to an interactive, light-up dance floor to practice moves before they reach the age when practicing becomes embarrassing. The staff maintain a watchful eye at all times and clean every play structure daily before opening. Staffers also host parties to celebrate birthdays or the end of second-grade finals week.
Banks of fog roll through the neon passageways of a seaside village beset by a dastardly pirate in Laser Voyage Cafe's themed laser-tag arena. When not blasting lances of light at each other through the watery maze, players crawl and bend through a maze of laser lights designed to emulate a scene from a heist movie or an extreme version of Charlotte’s Web. A host of arcade games invites guests to unleash their trigger fingers on digital foes, press pedals to the metal, or settle disputes with disco-lit dance-offs.
In 1976, busy California mother Joan Barnes wanted nothing more than to find a play place where she and her kids could enjoy age-appropriate, educational activities. Finding none, she developed her own innovative play environment within a developmental-based program structure now known as Gymboree Play & Music. Today, kids tumble and learn in locations around the world, engaging in open play and classes designed to build cognitive and motor skills. As parents participate in their child’s development, their child learns to paint, play music, and interact socially outside of preschool knitting circles.
In KangaZoom's 10,500-square-foot indoor facility, youngsters between the ages of 2 and 12 leap atop nine inflatable jumpers, hurtle down massive slides, and meander through challenging obstacle courses. Between rounds of energetic play, tykes can work on their keyboard skills in the computer corner, compete with peers in arcade games, or reboot their systems with snacks. Elsewhere, a toddler exploration area engages tots with age-appropriate toys, and five party rooms host private celebrations for birthday boys and girls. Adults can relax in the parents' lounge while their kids play, join them on the dance floor, or challenge them to unknot the French horn provided in music class.
As drivers execute hairpin turns and speed along the straightaways, the sleek black-and-blue chrome bodies of superkarts screech across the winding, indoor track at Andretti Indoor Karting & Games. The featured attraction at the sprawling complex, the raceway boasts a junior track for drivers 8 and older and an adult track where racers 16 and older can quench their need for speed without fear of a traffic ticket from a cop disguised as a yield sign. The fun center also fosters adrenaline-charged fun with a high ropes course extending up to two stories above the floor and a climbing wall that, at its peak, rises more than 30 feet. The two high-flying attractions look out over the arcade floor, where visitors play classic games such as Ms. Pac-Man or modern favorites such as Big Buck Open Season, which digitally emulates the real-life experience of hunting today's super-intelligent, talking deer.
The constant clack of billiard balls fills the Sky Bar, where guests tipple frosty cocktails while looking down at the race tracks though a plexiglass floor. Beyond the sports-bar atmosphere of the Andretti Grill, a different kind of entertainment reigns at Bonkerz Comedy Club, where performers' standup routines tickle funny bones before they shrink into humorless elbows.
Street Games’ mobile fun vehicles roar up to parties and events with a full complement of activities in tow, be it video gaming, laser tag, or trapping the host in a giant inflatable Zorb ball. Up to 20 guests pile onto the couches of the mobile gaming theater, clashing controllers in front of high-definition screens hooked up to Wiis and Xbox 360s. Pixel fatigue can be cured under the hailstorm of light beams that rains down on forces locked in games of laser tag, officiated by a friendly party concierge, or by entering an 11-foot-diamater inflatable Zorb ball, which gives riders the sensation of running inside a hamster ball or being a the mayor of a giant snow globe. Water Blaster Wars cool off summer shindigs with cannons that spray up to 60 feet, and Strike Force’s Velcro vests and balls provide a low-intensity alternative to paintball and dodgeball.
