← The Toddler Office

A pretend office for kids who want your job

Nobody buys a toy kitchen expecting it to teach cooking. You buy it because your kid stands at your stove pointing at the steam, and handing her a wooden pan honors the imitation instead of fighting it. The toy kitchen is one of the most successful toys ever made, and it makes exactly zero educational claims.

An office deserves the same treatment, because for a toddler, the office is what you disappear into. The laptop, the typing, the serious face on calls — that is the visible shape of your work, and she wants the playable version of it.

So this is the playable version. She gets four windows that look the part: Paint for deliverables, Email where mashing fills the message with stamped letters and a big SEND whooshes it away, a Video Call where two small creatures play peek-a-boo only when she presses something, and a Spreadsheet whose cells flood with color one press at a time. The family surname goes on the letterhead — [Your Name] & Co. — and when a grown-up clocks her out, she receives a printed-looking performance review with her actual numbers and a promotion to something like Senior Vice President of Scribbles.

To be plain, because parents should not have to decode marketing: this teaches office pretend-play the way a toy kitchen teaches dinner pretend-play. Letters appear and get voiced as sounds, but there is no curriculum and no claim of one. It is dress-up for the family business.

The Toddler Office — a free pretend office toddlers run by smashing the keyboard. Nothing breaks. No ads, no accounts.