The child liked it very much. I didn't want to leave. Not to say that there are a lot of things, but everything is sticky. The staff is very friendly and helpful.
There are no exhibits here. All objects are rather experimental installations. But here lies the ambiguity. Yes, most have explanatory signs, but the kids are clearly just having fun without delving into the phenomenon that is being demonstrated. Teenagers may be bored, I haven't seen them there.
We bought tickets in advance, but in fact, it seems that it is not a problem to buy at the entrance. At 10 a.m. we were almost alone, when we left at 13 it was already decent, but not a crowd.
A great place for entertainment and scientific knowledge of children. Various physical processes with game elements are presented. The children are very tired, you can keep the child busy for a couple of hours. The only thing is that we got there during a downpour and several rooms were closed.
Just a wonderful interactive museum for children. 2 hours was enough for us, there are tickets for 2 and 3 hours. Everything can be touched, tasted. There are several themed halls, a game with water, air. You can run cars from large slides, cars are assembled independently from Lego. There is a hall with huge interactive screens, you draw a drawing on a stencil yourself, scan it in a scanner and now it is already moving across the screen. There is a shadow play room, you can create a shadow theater from the proposed figures, there you can also select electrical circuits with light bulbs, motors, fans from the proposed blocks. I highly recommend visiting, children of different ages were delighted.