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Japanese Building Blocks – Gakken

The largest set of Japanese waffle blocks – Gakken – has 183 parts of 38 varieties. The large lid of the spacious box also serves as a building plate. A successful decision by the Japanese.

Unlike Plus Plus waffle blocks, Gakken blocks have pieces of many different shapes. They have round and curved pieces, long beams and H-like pieces. The empty spaces inside the blocks also can have different sizes and shapes, so you can stack inside different pieces in different positions. All this allows even more building possibilities than the waffle blocks sets with similar pieces. However, some pieces have less connection opgtions, because they don’t have pegs on the sides, or have only one hole.

Gakken brand appeared in Tokyo back in 1946 when it became an important component of Japan’s post-war efforts to rebuild the nation. Back then, it became incredible important to properly raise a new generation that will be able to create a better future.

The founder and educator, Hideto Furuoka, created first Japanese waffle blocks – Gakken. He later told that his inspiration was traditional Japanese wooden houses. There he saw an idea of flat blocks people can took apart and rebuild again when they need to. So he decided to create a toy which repeats this principle. Children can connect these Japanese waffle building blocks, stack them, lay them, plug, or tuck blocks in different orientations, for example, horizontally, vertically, and diagonally.

Japanese Building Blocks - Gakken
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Chicco Magic Blocks

Chicco Magic Blocks cube set. “Well, well, new cubes…” – Alesya is experimenting with the magnetic side of the cubes. We ignored our “respectable” 3-year-old age (cubes are recommended from 9 months) and purchased this. And we are happy. The side of the cube is 2 inches. You can connect the cubes in 3 ways:

1. Tongue and groove, each cube has a round yellow protrusion (about an inch in diameter) and a recess for this.

2. Magnetic – again, each cube have slightly convex and slightly concave red circles, and there are magnets under ach of these circles.

3. Regular, when you simply place the cube on the flat side. Flat sides also have nice pictures on them – a door, a window, bricks, a gate, a flower, a tomato. You can play out some situation with these pictures.

Chicco is a well-known and popular brand of all things for infants and toddlers. Chicco mostly makes strollers and other similar items, but there are also Chicco toys, like these building cubes. Obviously, the cubes are way too big to swallow accidentally, so they are safe and easy enough for kids who are older than 9 months. The cubes have magnets in them, but they are under the plastic surface. The cubes themselves are sturdy enough to prevent the magnets from falling out, so it’s not a safety concern.

It’s a good way to enhance a toddler’s imagination and a safe way to occupy the child for a long. It’s a shame that these sets are not that common, even while the idea is pretty obvious.

Chicco Magic Blocks
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Tegu Bulldozer With Trailer

I like to take magnetic construction sets somewhere outdoors – to the park, on a car trip, on a summer vacation. So the magnetic Tegu often lives in a car or stroller. We unexpectedly found a metal garden bench in the park, and Afonya (1.9) immediately began to sculpt the details of his favorite set on it. Well, the sisters and mother corrected the structures, turning them into more familiar objects, like a bulldozer, for example. Afonya added the wheels himself.

Tegu Bulldozer With Trailer
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Zoob Junior Giant

A small fraction of the Zoob army – just to show the difference between normal Zoob and Zoob Junior set.

Back in 1997, inventor Michael Grey introduced Zoob, a toy inspired by the science of motion and organism development. Zoob represents an acronym for Zoology, Ontology, Ontogeny, and Botany. Each set has rod-like pieces with joint balls and sockets on their ends. Each of these balls has small bumps on its surface, so the joints can both move and stay in a certain position if you need them to.

This innovative toy features a ball and socket connection system, mimicking the natural movement and design found in people, animals, and machines. With just five basic shapes, Zoob offers 20 different ways to connect them together.

Zoob building sets have won awards because they’re different from regular building blocks. They use plastic pieces that snap together, like gears and joints, to build all kinds of objects, limited only by your imagination. After you build something with normal Zoob or a Zoob Junior set, you can actually play with it – the pieces were designed to move after being assembled, so you can have fun with the toys you create.

Zoobs are great for helping children improve their fine motor skills. The pieces are small enough to easily manipulate and put them together, but they’re not too tiny like some other toys, so it’s easier for kids who find small objects tricky.

Zoob Junior Giant
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Magnetic Stick N Stack – Magna-Tiles Version

So I’ve ordered the smallest set of Magnetic Stick N Stack – 50 parts. Simply of interest – to see what kind of clone it is and what quality it has. I also liked the cute grids. Made in China – this is not surprising, but one part is missing a magnet, however, this is not fatal. There are round holes in the corners of the parts – you are supposed to insert the axle/rod to which the wheel is attached. There are no complaints about the quality, the magnetic properties and size are the same as those of Magna-Tiles. The children really liked the grids and L-shaped parts, it’s a pity that there are not very many of them in the set – 4 pieces of each type.

Magnetic Stick N Stack - Magna-Tiles Version
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Zoob Jeep

The big jeep is Zoob Junior, and the small one is from normal Zoob.

Back in 1997, inventor Michael Grey introduced Zoob, a toy inspired by the science of motion and organism development. Zoob represents an acronym for Zoology, Ontology, Ontogeny, and Botany. Each set has rod-like pieces with joint balls and sockets on their ends. Each of these balls has small bumps on its surface, so the joints can both move and stay in a certain position if you need them to.

This innovative toy features a ball and socket connection system, mimicking the natural movement and design found in people, animals, and machines. With just five basic shapes, Zoob offers 20 different ways to connect them together.

Zoob building sets have won awards because they’re different from regular building blocks. They use plastic pieces that snap together, like gears and joints, to build all kinds of objects, limited only by your imagination. After you build something with Zoob or Zoob Junior, you can actually play with it – the pieces were designed to move after being assembled, so you can have fun with the toys you create.

Zoobs are great for helping children improve their fine motor skills. The pieces are small enough to easily manipulate and put them together, but they’re not too tiny like some other toys, so it’s easier for kids who find small objects tricky.

Zoob Jeep
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Taikon Encyclopedia

I really like the detailed informative instructions in Taikon with step-by-step layout and indication of the number of parts. It looks almost like an encyclopedia of Taikon crafts.

Building straws, also known as building tubes, are a popular type of construction set with unique possibilities. They allow you to create silhouettes and contours of different objects and animals. All crafts from these sets can bend and move, so kids can actually play with their creations.

Instead of blocks, these sets have flexible plastic tubes, that look and act like soft cocktail straws. They can bend in any way and hold any position you want. The tubes usually attach to each other with special plastic connectors. The connectors can look and work differently in the different sets, but there are always many ways the straws can connect. The most common version is hard pins that go inside the straw’s hollow end, fixing it in place. Some connectors of this type have only one or two pins, some may have eight or ten. They also can have different forms, like sharp corners or straight rods. However, this connection type usually means that you can connect the straws only with their ends, and never with their middles.

These straws have great building potential, but, sadly, they can’t hold their shape under pressure (unlike, say, block towers that can hold something on their top). The straws’ building possibilities also depend on how long they are.

Taikon Encyclopedia