Legobricker & Never_smiles
Alright, Legobricker, let's talk about building a toy that actually teaches kids the precise steps to assemble a model—no improvisation, no guesswork. Does that interest you?
Yes, I love a challenge that keeps the brain busy, and I’ll add a splash of color to each step so it’s still a blast to follow.
Sounds good—just make sure every color cue is linked to a specific step; otherwise we’ll end up with a confusing rainbow of instructions.
Got it! I’ll design a set where each step gets its own color: red for step one, blue for step two, green for step three, orange for step four, purple for step five, and yellow for the final flourish. Each block will have a tiny color tag, and the instruction card will match the same palette so kids can see the exact sequence—no guessing, just a bright, step‑by‑step rainbow guide.
Nice plan, but remember the 5–10% of kids who’re color‑blind; a numeric or pattern cue might be safer than just the hue.
Sure thing! Every step will still have its own color, but we’ll also put a little number sticker on each block—1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6—so the kids who can’t read colors can just follow the numbers. And for an extra pattern cue, each block will have a tiny dot or stripe next to the number, so even if the colors are tricky, the kids will see “dot‑one, stripe‑two” and know exactly where to go. That way, no one gets lost in the rainbow.
Sounds solid, but make sure the dot or stripe is big enough that a toddler can actually see it; otherwise we’ll have a puzzle that’s more about visual hunting than building.
Right on! I’ll make each dot or stripe huge—like the size of a little block itself—so the tiniest eyes can spot it without a microscope. That way every little builder can see the pattern, the number, and the color all at once, and the puzzle stays a joy, not a hunt.
That’s a clever redundancy, but remember the extra stickers add cost and weight—maybe a simple “easy‑to‑see” font could cover all bases without the extra material.