bell notificationshomepageloginNewPostedit profiledmBox

Hoots : Is a (classic) GameBoy appropriate for my 1 year old son? My son is very excited in using technical devices like our printer, our tablet or our wireless phone. I'm thinking of buying him a classic, black an white GameBoy - freshhoot.com

10% popularity   0 Reactions

Is a (classic) GameBoy appropriate for my 1 year old son?
My son is very excited in using technical devices like our printer, our tablet or our wireless phone. I'm thinking of buying him a classic, black an white GameBoy (the grey one with big nobs), so that he can play with his own device and cannot acidentially make phone calls, etc.

Do you think a GameBoy or similar can be too much for him? Is it appropriate for his age?

I'm thinking of one or two games (Tetris, etc), so that pressing a button will do something on the screen. Of course he will not be able to "play" Tetris, but he likes pressing button on the printer so much.


Load Full (4)

Login to follow hoots

4 Comments

Sorted by latest first Latest Oldest Best

10% popularity   0 Reactions

Kids that age just like pressing buttons. Buy them a fake phone or computer and that will keep them busy for a while.

A Gameboy is not only generally considered as unsafe for a 1-year old, but also your kid will get tired of it quickly like any other toy. (Let alone if he actually can operate it)


10% popularity   0 Reactions

Appropriate? I'd say it's safe, has no small elements, isn't a choking hazard, is made of plastic and powered by low-voltage batteries, so even tasting it won't hurt. But should you buy one for your toddler? I'd say no.

Consult these two articles from babycenter:

tv watching guidlines for toddlers
video games and toddlers

While I understand what you want to do seems harmless (and actually I have myself considered introducing my toddler to some kind of games), I think that it is still too early.

First of all, I think a child should spend as much quality time experiencing the real world as possible. I would argue that games or tv are actually factors that interfere and disturb with that process.

Secondly, I suspect that between 1 to 3 years a lot of character and personality is built. I don't want my child to be a couch potato/computer games addict. Yes, these are extremes, used to make a point, and at this age nothing's decided - but let's push our kids towards the "good" activities. They'll have enough computer games when they grow up some more.

If by any chance you are getting bored and have no new ideas what to do with your kid just take out your toolset (supervise!) and see what happens :) Or an old bicicle inner tube. Just take look around your closets and shelves and find something your LO hasn't discovered yet.


10% popularity   0 Reactions

Answer

A Game Boy or similar is likely too much for a child of that age to handle on its own and therefore not an appriate toy for a toddler.

Reasoning

Consider firing up a game of Tetris: (If I recall correctly) You have to

wait for the Nintendo Logo to move across the screen
press any key
select 1/2 players
select mode a/b
select a level

All games require a similar sequence to get going. At age 1 this seuence is too much for a child to handle, I think. This will cause nothing but frustration.

Side note: modern devices, especially smart phones, do not have this problem. Every touch will almost instantly result in a reproducible result and action sequences are short.

To keep this answer short: I am not aware of any electronic device that is actually "safe" (i.e. makes all of you happy) to give to such a young child. You will have to play together with him for at least another year. And from your question I gather you don't need to buy anything to keep doing that.

For every approach worth discussing there is one issue I'd like to point out:
Our eyes grow to be most efficient at what we do most. If your child spends a lot of time focusing on close displays, he/she has a (dramatically) increased chance of becoming short sighted.


10% popularity   0 Reactions

As the others already said, it's maybe too much...(and the fact that he probably will not know how to really play until he is 3/4/5)
Nothing more to say...
Beside that, here's a suggestion:
When he really likes to press buttons/keys, maybe consider something like this:
(only an example [it's an keyboard which can make animal noises and regular musical notes])

(it can also be used by adults to improve their piano skills)


Back to top Use Dark theme