The best kids’ birthday parties have something in common: they give children something to do and something to remember. Not just a theme slapped onto the decorations, but an activity that earns a place in the “best birthday ever” conversation on the car ride home. If your child is somewhere in the 6 to 12 range, here’s a practical look at which themes and activities actually land — and how to match them to your specific kid.
For kids aged 6 to 12, the theme of a birthday party matters less than the experience of it. A party themed around their favourite video game that’s mostly just sitting around eating chips won’t outperform a genuinely active party with minimal decorations. The activity is the theme. That said, a theme that extends naturally from the activity — laser tag becoming a “space mission,” for example — adds a satisfying layer of storytelling for younger kids especially.
This one resonates hard from about age 7 onwards and keeps working well into the 10 to 12 range. The appeal is the same thing that makes kids love certain video games and adventure films: they get to be operatives with a mission. Laser tag is a natural vehicle for this theme — the fog-filled arena, the fibre-optic vests, the team-based game modes all feel genuinely mission-like without any additional setup on your part.
You can lean into it with simple party room touches: printout “mission briefings,” code names on name tags, and a debrief (cake time) styled as a post-mission report. It’s low-cost, high-impact, and the kids do most of the storytelling themselves.
Similar in structure to the spy theme but with more room for imagination. The laser tag context does a lot of the work here too — phasers and vests translate easily into intergalactic battle gear. This theme works especially well for the 6 to 9 range, where the imaginative framing is still thrilling.
For kids in the 9 to 12 range, a more straightforward competitive framing often works better than a narrative theme. The idea that they’re competing in an official tournament — with a running score, stakes, and a clear winner — appeals to the part of this age group that takes games seriously. Lazer Runner’s seven game modes (Team Capture, Eliminator, Vampire Game, Switcher, and others) make it genuinely possible to run a varied two-game “tournament” with different rules each round.
Not every theme or activity works for every kid, and knowing your child’s personality helps a lot:
Whatever theme you run with, the party room is where you pull it together. Lazer Runner’s birthday packages include a private party room for 1 hour and 50 minutes. That’s enough time for cake, gifts, and some themed activities without feeling rushed.
A few things to know about the room:
The two party packages cover most setups:
Players must be at least 6 to join the game. Lazer Runner is at 2 Allaura Blvd, Unit 10, Aurora, accessible from Newmarket, Barrie, Richmond Hill, Bradford, and across the GTA.
The logistics of a themed birthday party become a lot simpler once the main activity is sorted. If laser tag is the right fit for your group, booking early is the main thing — weekend slots, particularly on Saturdays, fill up weeks ahead during the school year.
Book your Lazer Runner birthday party here and secure your preferred date. For questions, call 647.500.8512 or email info@lazerrunner.co.
Reserve a private party online, or check live walk-in availability. Questions? Call 647.500.8512.