🐾 Stack, Laugh, Repeat! The game that brings families closer together.
HABA Animal Upon Animal is a classic wooden stacking game designed for children ages 4-8, promoting fine motor skills and family interaction. Made in Germany from sustainably-sourced wood, this game includes 29 colorful wooden animals and a die, making it perfect for 2-4 players. Its durable construction ensures hours of educational fun for the whole family.
Unit Count | 1.0 Count |
Package Quantity | 1 |
Material Fabric | Wood |
Style Name | Classic |
Color | Multi-colored |
Theme | Animals, Educational |
Number of Items | 1 |
Package Type | Standard Packaging |
Language | English |
Container Type | Box |
Special Features | Stacking |
Number of Players | 2-4 Players |
Z**R
One of the best Kids games you can get.
Animal Upon Animal is a German board game from HABA. I'd heard mention of it several times on the Dice Tower podcast and was intrigued.The game is extremely simple. It's a dexterity game, where all the components are wooden figurines of different animals like sheep, monkeys, penguins, and porcupines. You are stacking these animals on top of a large wooden alligator. Trying to see how high you can stack them before it all comes crashing down.On your turn you roll a die. The results will indicate that you will stack, one or two animals yourself, have the other players choose which of your animals you must stack, give one of your animals to another player to stack, or place one of your animals next to the alligator to make the base of the pyramid longer.First one to use up all their animals wins.As the stack gets higher the challenge of placing these figures becomes more difficult and it is extremely likely it will topple over. Which is part of the fun. It also leads into one of my favorite rules of the game. If any of the stack falls. the player that caused the collapse has to take ONE of the animals back and put the rest in the box.This rule is great because it still places a penalty on the player but it's not nearly as punishing as if they had to take back all the animals that fell.My oldest daughter really likes this game, it teaches patience, fine motor skills, and problem solving. She has come up with some rather creative solutions to getting her animals to stack. and I love watching her try. Also it's funny when the stack falls over so she still has a good time.The components of the game are really nice. Everything is big chunky blocks of wood, very easy for little hands to grip. Plus theyre nicely painted and easy to tell what animal is what.I really recommend this game for young kids. It's great to play it with them and it's also a good solo activity.
R**E
Fun, Quality, Aesthetically-Appealing Balancing Game
We bought three Haba games for our four-year old this Christmas; this one, Socken Zochen, and Zitternix. This is my favorite, and my two-year old is dangerously crazy about the pieces, but my four year old says that although she likes this game it's not as cool as Socken Zochen.The game consists of 7 different small wooden animals. There are four sets of animals for a total of 28 pieces plus a die and a wooden alligator that forms the base of the stack. They are all quite small, something I realized before ordering, but it really is hard to get the idea of size from the picture, so here are the measurements:The die, which is larger than standard dice is a .75" square.Aligator: 4" x 1"Penguins: 1.25" x .75"Frilled Lizards: 1.25" x 1"Hedgehogs: 1.3" x 1.2"Snakes: 2.8" x .4"Toucans: 1.4" x 1.25"Sheep: 1.75" x 1.4"Monkeys: 1.75" x 1"The gameplay is as follows:Seven animals per player, for up to four players. Each players receives one of each kind of animal.First player rolls the die which has a number of options: A single dot commands you place one animal of your choice, a double dot is two animals of your choice, a crocodile image means you add to the base of the stack, a hand means you give another player your piece to stack (thus meaning that other player will incur the penalty if they knock the tower down), and a '?' which means another player chooses which piece you have to stack next, which means they can of course do you in by choosing a difficult piece, like the sheep who is larger, heavier, and has less grippy edges.Of course, he who brings down the whole pile is the loser. The winner is the one who uses all their pieces without bringing about animal catastrophe, and if you just knock a couple of pieces down, they just go back in your pile, setting you behind a bit in your mission.I haven't had the opportunity to attempt to pile the animals on my own (although I'm dying to), but because of that silky-smooth Haba finish and the range of shapes, this game proves to be a bit more difficult than you might imagine. The smallness of the pieces adds to that difficulty, as well. And of course the die adds an unpredictability that ups the challenge as well.I think this is a great game. The pieces are endlessly appealing, and a very open-ended plaything, as my two year old demonstrated when she dubbed the monkeys 'howler monkeys' and continued to generally disregard most of her other presents to tote these four monkeys around in her new Uncle Goose wagon, and put them to 'bed' on her new Uncle Goose blocks. The monkeys watched her eat lunch, and she would have taken them to bed, but as these pieces are really quite small and a definite choking hazard. They are absolutely a high supervision item with a child under three, or more of an item to keep on a high shelf.While this game could easily be replicated without actually purchasing it (my kids already stack their animal figurines) the structure of having an actual game to play on this premise is extremely fun. It's a refreshing change in pace for preschool games. So many rely on the *yawn* Candyland luck and chance, roll the die and move forward, boring, boring boring. I like a game that requires skill and planning, and maybe just a touch of luck to mix things up, and this game does all of the above.I love that this game is made in Germany.I would highly recommend it to preschoolers well past the mouthing stage; with my only caveat being you might want to hold off if you have younger (below age 3) children, as the appeal is too great and pieces definitely too small.
J**C
So much more fun than Jenga. Extremely interesting piece shapes and connection points. High quality.
This game is great. I bought it for my 4 year old and when it arrived I tried it out solo. All the pieces are thick solid wood and really cute interesting shapes. The crocodile has a lip on one side to withstand horizontal force, and the other side slightly slopes downward. You have big chunky sheep, long snakes, and others like the bird with a long beak but difficult smooth round back. Many of them have ridges like gear teeth to mesh well and fit together. I find the physics of the pieces and shapes designed excellently, and trying to figure out in which direction it will push the lower pieces once I place the piece.As you play the shape becomes like a triangle so it gets more difficult. Even as an adult I tried first stacking without any additional side pieces, and then later with 2 chunky sheep on the side. It is not easy once the stack gets high.I felt like a kid playing this game and it is absolutely hilarious every time the stack falls over. I would highly recommend. The animals are very cute.
J**G
Super fun to play it with kids
Super portable and fun to play it with my kids (5 and 8), we take it to the beach, at the restaurant, etc.The quality of the components are very good; the gameplay is easy to learn, totally recommended for small kids, it really helped us to connect to each other and have fun instead of them playing with phones and tablets.
Trustpilot
3 weeks ago
3 weeks ago