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Brooklyn Laser Tag Birthday Parties
3 laser tag venues in Brooklyn, New York host kids' birthday parties — 3 with party bookings confirmed on the venue's own site. The usual package shape: 2–3 games of laser tag, a private party room for pizza and cake, and a dedicated party host who runs the whole show — gear-up, rules, and keeping the group on schedule. Venues are ranked below by local reputation (rating weighted by review count). Weekend slots go first everywhere — party rooms are the bottleneck — so start calling 2–3 weeks out.
1. Area 53 - Adventure Park
4.5 ★★★★★ 4,246 reviews
“If you’re looking for something different to do in NYC that actually feels like FUN, let me put you on to Area 53 in Williamsburg. We pulled up for their Adult Game Night on a…” — Lynn
2. Area 53 - Lounge - Laser Tag, Mini-Bowling, Arcade
4.6 ★★★★★ 1,142 reviews
“Today we celebrated my son's birthday at this place. ordered a non private laser tag session. I was a little worried. because i has never been there before. And in the end I was…” — Olga
3. Max Adventures Kids Birthday Party Place
4.8 ★★★★★ 964 reviews
“We celebrated my son’s 10tg birthday just yesterday, August 18th here and it was NOICE!!! There were a lot of games and both kids and adults s enjoyed themselves. The staffs were…” — Marshalee
Booking a party in Brooklyn: the short checklist
- Book 2–3 weeks ahead — Saturday afternoons fill first, and the number of party rooms (and party hosts on shift) caps how many parties a venue can run. A Sunday-morning or Friday-evening slot is easier to land.
- Ask what the package includes. The standard is 2–3 games plus private room time with a dedicated host; pizza and drinks are bundled or added per kid. Ask whether you can bring your own cake, and whether arcade credits or a second attraction come with the package at combo venues.
- Do the guest-count math. Packages price a base headcount — often 8–12 players — plus a per-kid rate for extras. Ask the arena's per-round capacity too: a guest list bigger than a round means the host rotates groups, which needs to fit your time block.
- Mixed ages? Ask about junior settings. If the guest list runs from 6 to 13, ask whether your party's games can run with junior settings or as a private group — lower-sensitivity blasters, host-balanced teams, no random teenagers in the arena with the little ones. Confirm the venue's age minimum (usually 5–7) before the invites go out.
- Handle waivers and shoes before drop-off. Many venues require a waiver per player, signed by each kid's own parent or guardian — send the e-sign link with the invitations. Closed-toe shoes for everyone playing.