Hello, it's Awesome Island coming back with an journal article that may intrigue your interest!
Interactive indoor games for kids have gotten popular in recent years and everything has become digitized in today’s digital world. Kids-oriented games are not an exception. They have been digitized in recent years and started to gain popularity among many young parents. Young parents like Generation Z and millennials have become a parent with kids. They are actively seeking a fun way of engaging their child with the play. As a matter of fact, playing digital games together has become an important aspect of modern family life and has potential to affect parent-child relationships.
In this regard, I would like to share a research paper written by Musick et al. (2021) that studied the role of digital gaming on parenthood and parent-child relationships. Their conclusion provides new perspectives of technology co-use in the context of gaming, such as an important relational tool that parents can use to promote conversations with their children.

In light of this, I think it is no brainer that young parents are attracted to kids’ clubs that provide more interesting and captivating interactive experiences where they can have fun with their child.
References
Musick, G., Freeman, G., & Mcneese, N.J. (2021). Gaming as Family Time: Digital Game Co-play in Modern Parent-Child Relationships. Proceedings of the ACM on Human-Computer Interaction, 5(251), 1–25.
Hello, it's Awesome Island coming back with an journal article that may intrigue your interest!
Interactive indoor games for kids have gotten popular in recent years and everything has become digitized in today’s digital world. Kids-oriented games are not an exception. They have been digitized in recent years and started to gain popularity among many young parents. Young parents like Generation Z and millennials have become a parent with kids. They are actively seeking a fun way of engaging their child with the play. As a matter of fact, playing digital games together has become an important aspect of modern family life and has potential to affect parent-child relationships.
In this regard, I would like to share a research paper written by Musick et al. (2021) that studied the role of digital gaming on parenthood and parent-child relationships. Their conclusion provides new perspectives of technology co-use in the context of gaming, such as an important relational tool that parents can use to promote conversations with their children.
In light of this, I think it is no brainer that young parents are attracted to kids’ clubs that provide more interesting and captivating interactive experiences where they can have fun with their child.
References
Musick, G., Freeman, G., & Mcneese, N.J. (2021). Gaming as Family Time: Digital Game Co-play in Modern Parent-Child Relationships. Proceedings of the ACM on Human-Computer Interaction, 5(251), 1–25.