Parents' Guide to

MIXIMAL

MIXIMAL Poster Image

Common Sense Media Review

Mieke VanderBorght By Mieke VanderBorght , based on child development research. How do we rate?

age 3+

Mix and match animals for some silly, multilingual fun.

Parents Need to Know

Why Age 3+?

Any Positive Content?

Parent and Kid Reviews

age 2+

Based on 1 parent review

age 2+

mix and match 11 animals

options are: elephant, kangaroo, dinosaur, penguin, pelican, koala, flamingo, mosquito, gorilla, monkey, & crocodile. With each mix & match, you get a cute little name mixing the animals together based the body parts used/part of the word (head - beginning of the word, torso/body - middle of the word, feet-end of the word) I wish I had known which animals were used before getting. But its cute to say the least

What's It About?

Animal drawings are segmented vertically into three parts. Kids swipe left and right to scroll through different animal heads, midsections, and bottom sections. Combine the head of a crocodile with a gorilla's chest and a flamingo's legs, for example. Tap to see and hear the name of your animal: Croc-ri-go in the case of the croc-odile, go-ri-lla, flamin-go. Each animal section makes a little movement, and there's a silly animation when kids match all three animal sections.

Is It Any Good?

Our review:
Parents say: (1 ):
Kids say: Not yet rated

Cute graphics, silly animations, and a large number of ridiculous animal combinations make for great fun and lots of giggles. A sweet rendition of traditional flipbooks, it has an added twist of sound and animation. The language options are a nice touch for kids to work on segmenting syllables or learning animal names in other languages. Though there are a good number of available animals, making for even more possible animal combinations, the appeal may be limited: There are only so many times kids will want to mix animal parts and laugh at what they've created. A photo option would be nice so kids could capture their creations, and some space for commenting on or describing these new animal combinations would round out the game and offer some ways to keep kids more engaged. Yet, overall, it's is a sweet and entertaining game.

Talk to Your Kids About ...

  • Families can talk about what kids create. Ask them about the animal they've made with the bird's legs, the bear's torso, and the elephant's head. What can this animal do, where does it live, what does it eat, how does it move, what sounds does it make, and so on?

  • Explore the animals' names, both the silly versions and the completed real ones. Help kids segment the syllables -- for example, by clapping -- and decode the name combinations. Explore the real animal names in foreign languages and learn something new together.

  • Have kids draw or create their own animal combinations on paper or with craft materials.

App Details

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