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Chinese Disneyland Fantasy

This is a Chinese Quircetti gears clone set. The name of the set is “Amusement Park”. This includes a carousel with horses, a Ferris wheel, and a slide where a car slides down. The mechanism that rotates the entire structure is hidden in the house. It seems like in other sets have music, but this one doesn’t, it just spins. It’s a very funny toy when assembled. The horses on the carousel go up and down as they rotate, the car slides down the hill (you have to catch it in time), there are two palm trees – one of them spins. The second was supposed to be hit by the car, but we lost the trunk, so the car flies away completely into nowhere. The people figurines are cute and rubbery. You can buy other sets of this series in this series and combine them.

This set is very similar to Quercetti Gears sets. The set includes several base plates that fit together like puzzle pieces. Nearly half the time these are in use at our house, they’ve been transformed into intriguing boxes. So, they’re not just basic pieces but are captivating structures in their own right. The second set of pieces has support structures, which are tubes and joints that interlock to create sturdy poles.

In addition to the gears, this set also comes with attachments like chains and rubber bands. You can use them to connect groups of gears that would otherwise be separate. Also, you can use them with other toys and building sets.

Chinese Disneyland Fantasy

12 thoughts on “Chinese Disneyland Fantasy

  1. Interesting set! Reminds me (or maybe this is its Chinese clone?) of the American Gears! Gears! Gears! Dizzy Fun Land. And perhaps you can roll large balls down the slide? Good fun for little ones.

    1. It’s really good fun. My youngest som was mesmerized when everything worked for the first time. And the elders also appreciated the scale of the construction – and, mainly, the plot possibilities. You really can roll the balls, if only very large ones – a slide has slots. I don’t know about the clone. The Chinese are always cloning everything 🙂 But you can’t blame them for their quality – everything is great. I really couldn’t find anything to complain about. I’m not very picky at all – as long as it fits well. Everything is fine here 🙂

  2. It’s a Korean clone called Femming.

    1. Fenmig is a Chinese brand though 🙂

  3. We also have a couple of these Chinese sets. One is like in the photo, but slightly downgraded, without a tower, but with a wheel and a slide. The second is simpler, I bought it just for variety, so that there were more details. We had to fix the houses to make them stop singing, the music was very annoying.

  4. I also saw a set just like this one online, called Amusement Park. And some gear train sets.

    1. Yes, I also saw some sets like that in a IRL store. They look very limilar to our FENMING sets. Look like they are the same sets, only with a different brand… I really liked the set with radio control, I’ll probably buy it, if it fits FENMING it will be just wonderful.

      1. Yes, the Chinese know what they are doing 🙂 We have a radio-controlled robot and gear-shaped insects, a copy of Gears! Gears! Gears!. The crafts from these sets are somewhat cumbersome and they move with difficulty.

  5. Our child recently built an all-wheel drive chassis from Fenming, each pair of wheels is driven by its own motor))) It’s very inconvenient to turn it on, radio control would be useful.

  6. We finally got radio controlled car set. It is fully compatible with its Chinese counterpart, even the music in the car chassis is just as annoying as the music houses)))) The craft quite quickly.

    1. Thank you for the information:) What’s the difference with Fenming set then?

      1. There were stickers, but my son lost them again. Aside from that – it’s a pure Fenming clone.

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