Touch screen devices are perfectly suited for the youngest users if they’re given the right apps. Here are three worthy of your little one’s little fingers.
Splish Splash Inn ($0.99)
Enter the Splish Splash Inn where animals are waiting to be counted behind every door. When I first played this game I dismissed it as a simple, cute counting app. The real fun begins, I realized, when you start touching the animals. Some play notes (I can play “Mary Had a Little Lamb” on the starfish), some have percussion sounds, and others, like the electric eels, just have super fun animations.
My Very First App ($0.99, plus additional in-app purchases)
Fans of Eric Carle rejoice! Even a simple memory game is given a boost with Eric Carle’s beautiful illustrations. I actually like this game the best on the easy level, where you slide the top and bottom panels to match the color with the object. The only drawback is that any additional card sets (shapes, animals) will cost you an extra $0.99 via in-app purchases. I’m not a big fan of in-app purchases in kids’ apps, especially after reading about The Smurfs! Just make the thing cost 3 bucks and be done with it.
Tickle Tap Toddler Pack 2 ($3.99)
To this day, Tickle Tap App’s Sound Shaker remains my favorite app for little kids, so when Tickle Tap comes out with new games, they’re worth a look. This pack comes with five games, and some are better than the others. Boogie Bopper is more directed derivative of Sound Shaker, where you can tap on dots to play a song. Find Fins is a simple hide-and-seek game, and Word Wiggler matches letters to pictures. All of these are fine, but the two I’m most interested in are Bug Builder and Color Collector.
With Bug Builder, you choose a shape and then color it. Then you tap the screen and watch your shape transform into a funny little bug. Since Olive discovered this app, my photo gallery has filled up with pictures of all different kinds of bugs.
I think Tickle Tap overreached with Color Collector, but it’s a fabulous concept that I keep thinking about. Using the phone’s camera, you center a colored object in the center of the circle to “collect” that color. When I first played this I expected this to build up a photo library as well, however they went with more sophisticated technology. The app attempts to recognize the color of the object you’ve taken a picture of. This would be amazingly cool if it worked well, but when dealing with little hands and less than optimal lighting conditions, the app either can’t assess the color or identifies the wrong color (it told me my orange chair is read). Even with these problems, it’s still so cool. For slightly older kids, the challenge of the collecting could be made into part of the fun.
Tickle Tap continues to push the boundaries of what these apps can do in a kids’ universe, which makes this app worth checking out.
I was provided review copies of all apps.