🎨 Build, Play, Learn—Your Imagination is the Limit!
The MindWare Q-Ba-Maze 2.0 Warm Colors set includes 36 interlocking cubes and 14 steel balls, allowing users to create intricate marble runs and sculptures. With a focus on creativity, physics, and spatial awareness, this educational toy is perfect for children aged 6 and up. Its lightweight design makes it easy to transport, ensuring endless fun wherever you go.
Product Dimensions | 33.02 x 45.72 x 22.86 cm; 635 g |
Manufacturer recommended age | 6 years and up |
Item model number | 42016W |
Educational Objective(s) | Literacy & Spacial Awareness |
Language: | English |
Number of Game Players | 1 |
Number of pieces | 50 |
Assembly Required | No |
Batteries Required? | No |
Batteries included? | No |
Material Type(s) | Plastic |
Colour | Multicolor |
Release date | 2 Oct. 2019 |
ASIN | B004PQY8YY |
P**N
Great fun for all the family
Bought is as a birthday present for my 5 year old niece. She loved it almost as much as the adults who helped her build it! I think we've hit on a present at we can come back to and add to for some time.
H**R
Five Stars
Bought as a gift and the recipient loved it!
L**R
Five Stars
Bought as gift
C**R
Five Stars
love this
E**T
Oh My this is just rubbish and impossible to build ...
Oh My this is just rubbish and impossible to build, and I am an engineer, never min dthe 6 year old who I thought might be able to slot this together no bother.. absolute disaster of a gift
A**E
Great toy!
Bought 2 sets for Christmas. 2.5 and 4.5 yr old kids Love them! I have to build the mazes and plans for them, but they independently played with the maze for quite awhile.I'd recommend placing your maze on a cookie sheet or something to catch all the marbles. Once they get going some tend to pop out the sides and they can easily roll all over the room and get lost if you're not careful.
E**N
Addicting fun for kids AND adults!
I gave two sets to my niece and nephew for Christmas last year. They were both six years old. Age-wise, it would probably have been a better gift at age seven or eight, as they needed help constructing the bigger mazes. To be honest, they didn't really understand how to create a path with the blocks for probably the first two or three days. But they thoroughly enjoyed this gift anyways.At first the twins would just tell us what they wanted to build, and my husband and I would build it for them, and then they would play with that maze for an hour or more. After watching us build for a while, the kids got in on the creative process. They did have trouble making some of the blocks connect to each other, but that's what makes this a good hand-eye coordination trainer.To scaffold their introduction, my husband and I would sort through all the different types of blocks and divide them into building sets: one for each twin and one set for the adults. The twins would then each build their own little mini mazes, and then my husband and I would use the remaining blocks to figure out how to attach their mini mazes together to create one giant maze. The kids loved this.If you build and design multiple paths into the maze, the kids can predict which marbles will get down first or which way they will go. You can create mazes with lots of entry and exit points, and then have the kids predict which exit each marble will take; later you can have them explain why they think the marble went that way.I will warn you that this toy is loud! Your kids will drop in several marbles at once (and over and over) and the little metal balls click and clack as they fall through the plastic, making a tremendous racket. But it's tons of fun.I absolutely love this toy and personally I could play with it for hours; thankfully it also held the kids' attention for extended periods of time, allowing me to enjoy spending time with them and enjoy play time myself. I think my middle school students would love it, I just wish it was a little quieter so that I could put it on my science exploration table.
N**M
A bit fragile for a rough boy
These Q ba maze blocks are okay. They aren't really appropriate for younger kids as they have trouble fitting them together. The plastic is also a little brittle so if the kids are too rough, the edges with the groove that allow you to fit the pieces together break. I bought a few different sets of these for my son and he broke a bunch of the pieces. I ended up buying him a different kind of marble run for his next birthday which is easier for him to put together and a lot more durable.
M**T
A-MAZE-ing
In the lobby of Children's Hospital - Boston, there is an audiokinectic sculpture by George Rhoads called "Bippity Boppity Balls." This massive and intricate Plexiglass-enclosed installation features "small rubber balls (that) zip along a multicolored track, triggering a series of sounds as they meet wooden blocks, bells, and metal chambers."I honestly think my son thought he was getting that sculpture in this box. Though it lacks the bells and whistles, this product provides tons of stimulating 3-D design play. This is a highly tactile and manipulative-type toy. The box says it all: "Three kinds of cubes. Countless possibilities."As with many toys in the age range of 8+, it's important to read the directions and lay out the pieces in size, shape and orientation before getting started. This is the age when the free-form play of the early years is replaced by following detailed instructions for maximum enjoyment.The toys in this age range, though, are fluid enough that once they grasp the "building code" they can construct their own models.This was a well-designed and sturdy product. My son has already added more sets to his Amazon Wish List.
A**R
A fun building set
I bought this as a birthday present for my 5 year old. It's a little complicated for him and I anticipate it will take a little while before he can put it together by himself but he really likes it. There is something mesmerizing about seeing the marbles drop through the towers. We would consider adding to this set if he plays with it enough to figure out how the pieces need to be arranged.
Trustpilot
1 week ago
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