|
Cooking' Cookies Game


|
List Price: N/A
Our Price: $6.47
Availability: N/A
Manufacturer: Fundex
|
Average Customer Rating:     

|
|
Amazon Maximum Age: 99 Manufacturer Maximum Age: 100 Amazon Minimum Age: 48 Binding: Toy Brand: Fundex EAN: 0045802426108 Feature: Spoon Smackin Fun, Card Game, Fundex Label: Fundex Manufacturer: Fundex Manufacturer Minimum Age: 48 Publisher: Fundex Studio: Fundex
|
|
|
Features
|
Spoon Smackin Fun, Card Game, Fundex
|
|
|
|
|
|
Editorial Reviews:
|
4 years & up. Will a rotten egg spoil the cookies? Find out when players try to grab all the ingredients to make the perfect cookies. Lunch box tin contains 26 ingredient cards, 4 spoons, and 8 recipe cards. No reading required. 2-4 players
|
|
|
Spotlight customer reviews:
|
Customer Rating:      Summary: Great game Comment: My 3 & 4-yr.-old children really enjoy this game. They don't get that part of the fun is SLAPPING down the spoons in a hurry to get your ingredients to win. They play pretty politely so far (2 mos). My 4-yr.-old also figured out quickly that she can cheat by not owning up to getting a rotten egg and just placing the "cookie" back down like it's an ingredient she doesn't need. So although there is an ease in cheating, I recommend this game for the sheer fact that an adult does not HAVE to play this game for the kids to enjoy it. The tin "lunchbox" is perfect, too; no cardboard box to slowly get torn up. Plus, what kid doesn't enjoy making cookies?
Customer Rating:      Summary: Great for preschoolers and the whole family! Comment: I purchased this game with the expectation that it would be fun for my 4 1/2 year old nephew to play when visiting. It has surpassed my expectations, as it has proved to be quite popular with a wide age range of kids. The adults even enjoy playing it with the kids (for a while) and we've had groups of kids playing it together ranging in age from 2 to 6 years old, and 2, 3, and 4 year-olds with an adult as well. It's great, b/c the little ones can participate without disrupting the game for the older ones. They LOVE it! It is simple to understand, as there is no reading required - just match the ingredients to the recipe card and the first person to get all of the ingredients for their cookie wins. It's entertainig enough to keep the older kids occupied and playing over and over, and the kids can play on their own with little adult participation necessary. Highly recommended, especially if you're looking for something that 3-and 4-year olds can play with kids a few years older.
Customer Rating:      Summary: This is a GREAT GAME!! Comment: I bought this for my son (6) for his birthday, and we played it with his two younger brothers age 4 & 2 1/2, and it's now my new favorite game. Everyone could play it, it was fast moving (I didn't want to poke my eyes out due to boredom!). I would definitely recommend this game if you're sick of boring kids games that last forever!
Customer Rating:      Summary: Fun, even for older kids and adults playing along Comment: I bought this game for my son, 4 1/2. He loves cookies, and he loves this game. The rules are simple and easy to explain. My son played this with his grandparents and his cousins, 5 and 8-years-old, and everyone had a good time. The rotten eggs make the game interesting even for the adults.
Customer Rating:      Summary: What fun! Comment: I first saw Cookin' Cookies at a homeschool game day attended by ages 1-6. The kids could not get enough of this game! It's a hoot. And now I'm buying one for our family. Fast-paced, fun, no reading required, practices matching skills and following directions, easy for little ones to play but older ones like it too (even adults!). The way it was played was that each child was given a recipe card and a plastic spoon with a suction cup on the end. Cookie cards were put face down in the center of the table and they used the spoons to smack each card (which then stuck to the suction cup) and they looked underneath to see if it was an ingredient from their recipe card. If it's a rotten egg, they had to put back all of the ingredients they'd collected. The first to finish his or her recipe was the winner. But the kids really didn't care who won. They just loved the suction spoons and picking up the cookie cards.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|