Imagimake Mapology USA & World Map Puzzle with Flags, Capitals, Stickers | Educational Toys for Ages 5-7 | Jigsaw Puzzles for Kids Ages 8-10 | Geography Toys for Ages 8-13 | 6 Year Old Boy/Girl Gifts
$39.99
Price: $39.99
(as of Dec 13, 2024 14:07:35 UTC – Details)
Product Description
LEARNING & EDUCATION TOYS: A Jumbo Pack with 3 Map Puzzle packed into 1 box – USA, World & Europe maps. Unique, fun, and exciting puzzles for kids ages 8-12 helps children learn about the USA map and more than 65 countries of the World along with their capitals
COUNTRY & STATE SHAPED PUZZLE PIECES WITH FLAGS & FACTS : This united states map and world map puzzle cut into actual shapes of states and countries. Kids piece them together, understanding shapes and sizes. This helps to foster geography knowledge, spatial awareness, and the best problem-solving toys for boys age 8-12. This jigsaw puzzles doubles the fun as this toys for ages 5-7 includes Capitals and Flag stickers with new Fun facts about states and countries of the world.
GEOGRAPHY-MADE FUN: From Montana in the north to Texas in the south, from Japan in the east to Mexico in the west, kids learn the locations of the different states and countries as they play with this Map of the World & Ameri puzzle. This interactive puzzle helps kids retain geographical knowledge in a fun and memorable way. This geography games for kids 8-12 aids in understanding neighboring regions. For instance, placing Germany, the Czech Republic, and Poland together enhances their recognition as neighbors.
HOME SCHOOL ACTIVITIES – Spark your child’s curiosity and help them discover the world with Imagimake’s puzzles for kids ages 8-10. These captivating kids puzzle sets ages 4-6 and beyond are an excellent addition to your homeschooling supplies, providing an interactive and educational experience for children of all ages.
GIVE THE GIFT OF LEARNING – The perfect educational and exploration gift for any occasion! Ideal for both boys and girls, this captivating puzzle makes an excellent gift for 5 year old boy or gift for 5 year old girl, 6 year old boy gift and up, or for holidays, birthdays, or any special occasion.
Customers say
Customers find the puzzle an educational toy that helps kids learn geography. They appreciate its easy assembly and color palette. However, some customers report missing countries and flags. There are mixed opinions on the build quality, value for money, and material quality.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
Jonathan Borja Daniels –
Nice learning tool
Got these from my boys (3&4) so they can learn about their country. They love this. Board game night I have them pick out a game and this one is always one of their picks and we have about 50 board games. Theyâre picking this over Bluey Keepy Uppy and if youâre a parent with a Bluey obsessed kid you understand how fun this must be to ditch Bluey.Itâs educational, youâll have lots of fun, theyâll have lots of fun and best of all youâll make memories with them.
Romi –
Great game to play and learn
My kids and I love playing with these maps
John C. –
Generally a good world map.
For grandson. He likes puzzles and maps
TT –
Fun. Educational. A good microcosm of the world.
This is not so much a game as it is a somewhat self-correcting geography test. The puzzle pieces fit surprisingly well together, in spite of the fact that they’re glorified craft foam. You’ll have to watch your kid place the capital flags though, and try not to let them catch you surreptitiously looking up capitals you’ve never heard of on your phone or mouthing the words of Wakko’s United States to yourself because you forgot that Pierre is the capital of South Dakota.The little plastic flags come with sheets of stickers that have the name of a capital on one sticker and that country’s/state’s flag on the other. Pro tip: have an adult do the sticker placing, otherwise you’ll end up with a Canadian flag with “Havana” on the other side, which is fine if you’re going for really subtle political commentary, but that’s probably not going to help your middle schooler pass geography tests. If they still do geography tests in middle school. I don’t know; I homeschool, which is why I bought this thing in the first place.The world is, of course, a big place, and some countries are apparently more, let’s say, worthy of attention than others. Europe and the US get their own maps, but not even all of the European countries get their own little flag in the proverbial sand. Some of the states had to be combined into one puzzle piece because they’re so small, which led to an interesting conversation about how basically every debate in our country boils down to population density. I’d like to see a more complete version, even if the box has to be bigger.My kid made the mistake of trying to move the Europe puzzle, resulting in Central Europe falling apart in a jumbled heap that was hard to put back together. I assured him that that happens in real life every so often, so he shouldn’t worry about it.Rather like in Risk, South America has roughly 6 countries of note and none of them are the beautiful islands that anyone who plays real-life Risk (basically anyone with an off-shore bank account and a close relative in politics/the military industrial complex) would go on their vacay. Venezuela was troublesome–the Caracas flag slot wasn’t done right and the flag kept falling over. Maybe it’s a manufacturing error, maybe it’s a metaphor–you decide.Africa has only 8 flags and several countries are too small to be labeled. This is the biggest area of improvement. Again, I’d like to see a bigger version with all countries and flags. Half this continent feels like it’s changed since I memorized Yakko’s World, and it’s embarrassing that my kids know more African geography than I do.I’d also like to see a larger breakout of the Middle East, Asia, and Oceana because I’m a product of a time when our school system acknowledged Mesopotamia for a few thousand years and then forgot it ever existed, and the only Asian country was China until WWII, and then you learned about battles but with a vague understanding of them happening “somewhere in the Pacific.” A good number of countries are flagged, but not all, so I’d love to see more completeness, if nothing else because Moana 2 is coming out and I still don’t really have a solid grasp of where the Heart of Tafiti was supposed to go.A note about putting the game away–I guess I guess I’m a bad American because I didn’t put the ol’ US of A first. I put the world in the box first, then Europe, and tucked the flags to the side. I thought tension would hold the pieces together enough to transfer the puzzle to the box, but when I went to put America on top, the states fractured faster than in the aftermath of the election of 1860, or possibly 2024. Oops. Do yourself a favor and use the enclosed cardboard to put America first, then the other puzzles, and chuck the flags in wherever they fit.In all, I’m glad I got this–it’s more fun to place flags in foam than it is to write a boring geography test. My flag recognition is terrible, which I was reminded of all over again during the Olympics, so I’m sure this will help ME learn as well as my kids. I’m rather hoping the company comes out with some expansions, but a bigger set with flag slots for every country would be even better. Even if they don’t, this covers a good chunk of the world’s countries and is a big help for the 50 states, and that’s a good start.
juan –
Great for learning and playing
My daughter was struggling with learning all the states, and we came across his product, which was perfect and exactly what I was looking for. The quality is great. Itâs very colorful and the material that itâs made with is very durable. Itâs easy to make it into a game and make learning fun. I would recommend this set of cards
Bella –
Great for kids who love flags
My 5 year old loves flags. World and State flags. I bought the world flags to see if he likes it and if it was easy for him to do. You do have to put the stickers on the flags individually and i had to help him at first putting them in. Itâs a little hard to see the slits made for the flags. but once i showed him. heâs been playing with it by himself and with me. Great purchase. Just bought the state one too.
Cathy Montgomery –
Unsteady base
The concept of this puzzle is very nice BUT the delivery is not so. Its foam based and without support the actual sturdiness leaves a lot to be desired. The puzzle has a thin card box cover to put the puzzle in to transport around the house! However it is not sturdy and if you attempt to move the foam out of the box it crumples to pieces. This is very disturbing bc you canât really move this around to be viewed by different people! It was most frustrating for my grandkids bc they like to show off their puzzle and to use it to quiz the rest of the family. Hard to do when u risk demolishing the puzzle when moving it around. A sturdy base would have been so much better. Just a little tweak would absolutely make this so much better!
scalab –
Fun for everyone!
Made of sturdy foam. Pieces fit in nicely.Colors are bright.Love the flags that mark state capitals.
Juan Flores –
Está muy detallado y muy bien hecho
Chris –
Good fun and educational too
akram –
Disappointed. Lots of missing countries
Guddloo –
Very nice and educational for kids
Shikha –
Its very easy to memorise while playing