Blue Orange Games Zimbbos Award Winning Wooden Skill Building STEM Counting Stacking Game for Kids








Key features
- •Works on Dexterity
- •Toy and game
- •Basic additions
- •All wooden balancing game for 1 to 4 players, ages 3 and up.
- •Roll the die to find out how many elephants to add to the pyramid. Place the 10th elephant to win!
- •Helps children develop a sense of balance, hand-eye coordination, and dexterity, while promoting creativity.
Blue Orange Games Zimbbos Award Winning Wooden Skill Building STEM Counting Stacking Game for Kids
List Price: $40.14$36.13DEALYou Save: $4.01 (10%)
Free shippingFree Returns – 30 daysFree Order CancellationSecure Payment2–3 Days DeliveryGet It June 23, 2026In Stock (8)No marketing spamNo account requiredFulfilment by FedEx / Amazon / UPS / ShipwirePayPal / Card Buyer Protection
Customer Reviews
Reviews sourced from verified Amazon purchasers4.5
out of 5
Based on 10 reviews
5★
70%
4★
30%
3★
0%
2★
0%
1★
0%
I love this Game! It is so much FUN!
Mother✓ Verified Purchase•September 28, 2023
This game is really fun for parents to play with their little ones!!! Its also great even for individual play by our kids. Sometimes they just like stacking the elephants in different scenerios. We got this game a year ago and we still love it. Orginally got this game because my 4 year old loved elephants. I was surprised by how much even Mommy loved playing. It was a great game for even our 21 month old!! Its the only game that we have that seems to captivate all age groups in our house. This is by far my favorite game to play with my kids (now 5 and 2 1/2). I highly recommend this game, especially if you enjoyed Jenga, as it reminds me alot of that game but Zimbbos is much cuter and more fun for the Little Ones! YOU will enjoy Zimbbos!
A fun cooperative block stacking activity
justsomeone✓ Verified Purchase•September 14, 2023
This is a great way for several kids to take turns stacking elephants and other animals. The blocks stack easily and the little platforms give plenty of choices for placement.
This is not really a competitive game. There is no strategy since players roll a dice to determine what to add to the tower. The rules say that whoever adds the last elephant is the winner, but I suggest ignoring that portion for little kids. This is great if you want to teach kids the important life lesson that sometimes, no matter what you do, you will lose.
Technically, the rules say that if the tower gets knocked over you just start over, so if you do want to win, the best strategy is to knock the tower down on your turn if you think you are setting up your opponents. However, if you do this nobody will ever want to play with you and your two year old will not understand why you are so mean.
This is not really a competitive game. There is no strategy since players roll a dice to determine what to add to the tower. The rules say that whoever adds the last elephant is the winner, but I suggest ignoring that portion for little kids. This is great if you want to teach kids the important life lesson that sometimes, no matter what you do, you will lose.
Technically, the rules say that if the tower gets knocked over you just start over, so if you do want to win, the best strategy is to knock the tower down on your turn if you think you are setting up your opponents. However, if you do this nobody will ever want to play with you and your two year old will not understand why you are so mean.
A great first game for little ones
Katrina B.✓ Verified Purchase•August 31, 2023
I picked up this game for my 2.5-year-old and it's been a hit. The rules are pretty basic: roll the die and then stack the pieces (cute elephants, a clown, a bear, etc.) according to what you roll.
My son is too young to fully understand the concept of the game, but with my help and instruction, we can get through a short game. It's been really good for teaching him about numbers and balance, and also for teaching the basic concept of taking turns during a game. The hardest part, for him, is following the "directions" that rolling the die gives you. He wants to execute his own stacking plan.
But that makes this game a good toy as well. My son will often ask for "Elephant Game!" just to practice stacking and rolling the die -- it can keep him entertained for quite a long time.
This isn't a game that'll be fun for years and years... I'm sure kids will outgrow it before they enter school. But it's a great introduction to games for little ones, a good starting point.
My son is too young to fully understand the concept of the game, but with my help and instruction, we can get through a short game. It's been really good for teaching him about numbers and balance, and also for teaching the basic concept of taking turns during a game. The hardest part, for him, is following the "directions" that rolling the die gives you. He wants to execute his own stacking plan.
But that makes this game a good toy as well. My son will often ask for "Elephant Game!" just to practice stacking and rolling the die -- it can keep him entertained for quite a long time.
This isn't a game that'll be fun for years and years... I'm sure kids will outgrow it before they enter school. But it's a great introduction to games for little ones, a good starting point.
Everyone loves this.
Ruth✓ Verified Purchase•August 28, 2023
It's cute, it's made entirely of wood, the parts don't break and there aren't too many of them, there is nothing really painful for you to step on. Plus the kids find this very low-tech balancing game very entertaining, with very easy to understand principles (balancing, taking turns). I keep a few in my gift closet for those birthday parties that have somehow slipped my mind. I have 100% positive feedback from the other parents, who love it and say their kids play with it, so it isn't just me. On top of all that, it looks like the sort of thing your kid SHOULD be playing with, unlike a nintendo, so it's guilt free. What more could you want?
cute balancing toy
Silver Bell✓ Verified Purchase•August 14, 2023
Zimbbos are designed to be a balancing game where players take turns balancing a certain number of elephants based on a die role trying to balance all the elephants.
While this game is designed for children as young as 3, I have found that for us that was too young to play with these as a game, but more of just allowing them to balance the elephants and animals on their own terms. I will introduce the Zimbbos again at a later time as an actual game around the age of 4.
While this game is designed for children as young as 3, I have found that for us that was too young to play with these as a game, but more of just allowing them to balance the elephants and animals on their own terms. I will introduce the Zimbbos again at a later time as an actual game around the age of 4.
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