If you're constantly fidgeting like me, consider these deals on fidget toys for adults during October Prime Day
Which fidget desk toys to consider during deals season.
I bite my nails. I hate that I do it, it's a pretty gross habit, and I've tried all sorts of tricks to kick it. The best solution I've found is to give my hands something better to do when stress or boredom kicks in. So for the last seven years, I've kept a fidget toy on my desk (or in my pocket) at all times.
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I've tried at least a dozen different toy designs in that time—some super satisfying, others total junk—and think I've figured out a winning combo for "adult" fidget toys. It's gotta be small enough to use with one hand, have a variety of "actions" so it doesn't get boring too fast, and if it has buttons with loads of feedback, that's a huge bonus. There are loads of adult fidget toys on sale during October Prime Day that often go for less than $20. Some are even under $10. Some I've owned before and others look so great that I'm hovering over "add to cart" myself.
Adult fidget toy deals during October Prime Day
Impossible Cone | 2 piece| Noise: Low | $18.99 $9.58 at Amazon (50% off)
A common fidget toy design that you can find all over the place, but this is a decent price for two versions of the same toy. I have a 3D-printed cone version that I play with constantly, but I really like the cylindrical version that can stand upright no matter which way you thread the pieces together.
Metal Fidget Slider | Small | Noise: High | $21.57 $15.98 at Amazon (26% off)
Inject this one into my (fidgeting) veins. I'm just learning about this new-ish breed of metal sliding toys. If you watch the video on the store page you'll see how it works: it can slide perpendicularly up/down and left/right, clicking ever so nicely along its path. Only knock is that noise: expect to irritate other folks in the room.
Keyboard Clicker with LED Light | Keychain | Noise: Unknown | $14.99 $7.99 at Amazon (47% off)
The most PC gaming fidget toy by far. You'll find lots of keyboard clicker toys like this online, but this is the first one I've come across that lights up. The listing doesn't say how clicky the keys are (are we talking Red or Blue switches here, folks?), but expect this one to be on the noisy side.
WTYCD Fidget Pad | One-handed | Noise: Medium | $9.99 $4.79 at Amazon (52% off)
I bought this exact model of fidget pad years ago and would still be using it if I didn't leave it at a party. It's got everything I want in a fidget toy: an analog stick to jerk around, buttons with lots of travel and loud clicks, and it's small enough to stash in a palm while walking or talking.
Fidget Clicker | Small | Noise: High | $19.57 $13.97 at Amazon (29% off)
A handheld rectangle full of light switches that I can flip over and over again all day? Is this real life? This one (made by the same company as the other metal toy above) is going in the cart immediately. Just don't tell my partner, who will probably kick me out of whatever room this thing is clacking in.
Infinity Cube | Large | Noise: Medium | $5.02 $4.02 at Amazon (20% off)
This is barely a discount on an already cheap-as-heck fidget toy, but I'm highlighting it because I'm looking at the one I own right now and really want to fidget with it. This is a cube that folds in and out like one of those paper puzzles people make in school. It's a linear action, so you can get really good at shifting it quickly and almost look like one of those speedy Rubik's Cube solvers. All that plastic clacks around, though.
Fidget Cube | Six sides | Noise: Medium | $12.99 $11.99 at Antsy Labs (8% off)
Another deal that's barely a deal, but this is a reminder that there's still no better fidget toy than the original fidget cube (arguably the product that kicked off this category in earnest). Six sides, unbeatable variety of functions, compact, and durable. I own three of these in different colors and keep one in my backpack.
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Morgan has been writing for PC Gamer since 2018, first as a freelancer and currently as a staff writer. He has also appeared on Polygon, Kotaku, Fanbyte, and PCGamesN. Before freelancing, he spent most of high school and all of college writing at small gaming sites that didn't pay him. He's very happy to have a real job now. Morgan is a beat writer following the latest and greatest shooters and the communities that play them. He also writes general news, reviews, features, the occasional guide, and bad jokes in Slack. Twist his arm, and he'll even write about a boring strategy game. Please don't, though.