Play the Littlest Pet Shop Game!
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Set up and play a homemade Littlest Pet Shop game using toy pets, cards, simple rules, and cooperative challenges to care for, trade, and win.

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Step-by-step guide to play the Littlest Pet Shop Game

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How To Play The Game Littlest Pet Shop Board Game With 4 Littlest Pets! Family Game Night!

What you need
Adult supervision required, cardboard or large paper for a game board, colouring materials, dice, index cards or scrap paper, small tokens like buttons beads or coins, toy pets

Step 1

Clear a flat table and lay the cardboard or large paper down as your game board.

Step 2

Place all your toy pets on the "Start" space of the board.

Step 3

Cut or fold the index cards into about eighteen cards.

Step 4

Make three piles of cards and label each pile "Care" "Trade" and "Event."

Step 5

Write a simple care action on each Care card (examples: Feed +2 tokens Groom +1 Play +2).

Step 6

Write a trade rule on each Trade card (examples: Swap one token Swap pets with another player).

Step 7

Write a cooperative challenge on each Event card (examples: All players name two care tips to earn +1 each).

Step 8

Put the tokens in a pile in the center of the board.

Step 9

Give each player three tokens to start the game.

Step 10

Decide who goes first by having every player roll the dice once and letting the highest roll start.

Step 11

On your turn roll the dice and move your pet forward that many spaces.

Step 12

When you land on a space draw the top card from the matching pile and follow the instruction on that card.

Step 13

Play rounds until someone has 10 tokens or until the cards run out then count tokens to declare the winner.

Step 14

Share your finished Littlest Pet Shop game on DIY.org

Final steps

You're almost there! Complete all the steps, bring your creation to life, post it, and conquer the challenge!

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Help!?

What can we use instead of cardboard, index cards, tokens, dice, or toy pets if we don't have them?

Use a flattened cereal box or poster paper for the board, cut printer paper into 18 card pieces instead of index cards, use coins, buttons, or bottle caps as tokens, substitute a spinner app or a numbered paper cup for dice, and print pet pictures or draw pets on paper if you don't have toy pets.

What should we do if the Care/Trade/Event piles get mixed up, tokens spill, or cards run out mid-game?

Color-code and clearly label the 'Care', 'Trade', and 'Event' piles, keep tokens in small bowls at the board center to prevent spills, and reshuffle discarded cards into each labeled pile when that pile runs out.

How can we adapt the rules to suit younger children or older kids?

For younger kids simplify each Care card to a single icon and shrink the board to fewer spaces with everyone starting with one token, while for older kids write numeric rewards and complex Trade rules and raise the win condition (for example to 15 tokens) for a longer game.

How can we make the game more creative or challenging once we've played it a few times?

Let players decorate the cardboard board, write themed custom Care/Trade/Event cards (for example a 'Birthday' Event that gives +3 tokens), add specialty spaces with mini-challenges, and then photograph the finished game to share on DIY.org.

Watch videos on how to play the Littlest Pet Shop Game

Here at SafeTube, we're on a mission to create a safer and more delightful internet. 😊

Littlest Pet Shop: The Game - 1080p60 HD Walkthrough Part 1 - Pets Plaza #1: Intro

4 Videos

Facts about board games and cooperative play for kids

♻️ Homemade LPS games are perfect for upcycling — old cards, cardboard, and tiny toys make creative game pieces and boards.

📺 An animated Littlest Pet Shop TV series premiered in 2012, giving many of the toy characters fun stories and personalities.

🤝 Cooperative games are designed so players work together to meet goals, which helps build teamwork and friendly problem-solving.

🏢 Hasbro owns the Littlest Pet Shop brand — many modern toy lines and licensed games come from this company.

🐾 Littlest Pet Shop began as a line of small collectible animal figures that inspired TV shows, games, and huge fan collections.

How do you play a homemade Littlest Pet Shop game?

Set up a play area and arrange toy pets on spaces or in a “pet shop.” Make simple cards labeled “Care,” “Trade,” or “Challenge.” Players take turns drawing a card, completing the action (feed, groom, swap, or solve a cooperative task), and earning care tokens. Cooperative challenges require players to work together to care for a pet or reach a shared goal. The game ends when pets are cared for or a set number of tokens are collected; celebrate with a group reward.

What materials do I need to play the Littlest Pet Shop game?

You’ll need Littlest Pet Shop toys or similar small figures, index cards or paper for action cards, markers, and a few tokens (buttons, coins, or stickers). Add a dice or spinner to move or determine outcomes, a small timer for timed challenges, and a play mat or cardboard board. Optional extras: envelopes for trading, stickers for rewards, and a simple rule sheet. Use larger tokens for younger children to avoid choking hazards.

What ages is the Littlest Pet Shop game suitable for?

This homemade game suits children roughly ages 3–10. For ages 3–5, simplify rules, use large, durable toys, and provide close supervision with mostly cooperative tasks. Ages 6–8 can handle basic strategy, trading rules, and light competition. Ages 9–10 enjoy more complex challenges, card combinations, and cooperative missions. Adjust difficulty, time limits, and safety measures based on each child’s attention span and fine-motor skills.

What are the benefits of playing and safety tips?

Playing develops imagination, social skills, sharing, negotiation, and fine motor control. Cooperative challenges build teamwork and empathy while simple rules teach turn-taking and following directions. Safety tips: avoid small parts for children under 3, supervise trading to prevent swallowing, check toys for loose pieces, and set clear boundaries for safe play. Rotate toys and sanitize pieces regularly to keep group play healthy and fresh.
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