can ride down onto the included trampoline, plus a hidden pop-up cannon that fires balls of “water.” The truck drives well and is remarkably durable - a welcome quality, considering most of the toys the boys get these days break within a few drives off the kitchen table. That’s attributable to all the different ways the kids can play with it: The thing is huge, with a giant extending ladder that doubles as a slide that Marshall et al. But this is the first one I’ve come across since they were born that I found genuinely impressive. Might toys like this have been available all along? Yes. Was I paying attention to children’s toys prior to having my first son four years ago? No. It harkens back (indulge me an “in my day” moment) to the toys I grew up with - the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtle and GI Joe and MASK (seriously stay with me) vehicles and playsets that were cleverly designed, featuring arrays of small features and interactive elements. Whatever the name, this fire truck, released as a tie-in with the mercifully watchable Paw Patrol: The Movie, has been a crowd-pleaser (sons aged 4 and 2) since the moment it came home. At Amazon it’s “ PAW Patrol, Marshall’s Transforming Movie City Fire Truck.” Target goes with, “ PAW Patrol: The Movie Marshall Transforming City Fire Truck.” Walmart has its own permutation: “ PAW Patrol, Marshall Movie Transforming City Fire Truck,” while Bed Bath & Beyond shows its respect for trademark law: “ PAW Patrol® Transforming Movie City Fire Truck.” And Macy’s, which I thought had basically gone out of business, is clearly keeping things lean in both its corporate operations and its toy titling philosophy: “ PAW Patrol Marshalls Transforming Vehicle.” I can find no consensus on what this toy is actually called.