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Homeschool Panel Gives 3-D Puzzle Mixed Reviews Voxal Challenges Some, Disappoints Others
![]() Age: 9 and Up Gender: Boys and Girls Category: Puzzles & Skill MSRP: $9.99 TDmonthly rating: ![]() What It Is: Made of durable, high-quality plastic, Voxal is a three-dimensional spatial puzzle consisting of three identical, flat pieces. When correctly assembled, the 3 ½”-diameter Voxal is symmetrical. Voxals are available in a variety of colors and shapes, but the basic solution remains the same. ![]() Ledford liked the term "Voxal," which “seems like it should be a real word but wasn’t in several online dictionaries.” Zuidema didn’t understand the space theme of the packaging and lamented that the Voxals would only be decorative if “glow-in-the-dark plastic is the look you’re going for.” ![]() What the Kids Thought: “Alyssa’s (8) favorite quality was how the puzzles looked when they were assembled,” Zuidema said. The Wilson children liked interchanging the pieces to create “new designs such as their own Beatle (Ringo Star).” The Shanahan children were “intrigued” when they saw the pieces, but after “manipulating them briefly, the children would go back to the package, reread the instructions, then put it down and wander away,” Shanahan reported. Katie (7) wanted to use the pieces as “playground equipment for my little dolls.” ![]() Dawson’s children liked the aliens on the packaging, and Joe (8) commented that the assembled Voxals “look like stars.” He and Ethan (9) were pleased when they were able to independently assemble a Voxal; Ethan had help from the online solution and Joe from his sister‘s example. “Spinning a Voxal made of three different colored pieces is really neat!” Joe raved. ![]() How to Improve It: Since there is only one solution and thus no more challenge (which several participants noted), Dawson suggested focusing marketing “more on the decorative features … than on the challenging aspects.” Several children enjoyed using the completed Voxals as decoration, but Shanahan complained that “plastic is not an attractive art piece.” ![]() Victoria also recommended updating the packaging, and Shanahan added that it “would not have caught our attention” as is. “I like the different colors and shapes, and would like to see them combined into one package so the consumer can, without additional purchase, build both a single-color Voxal and a multi-color Voxal,” Ledford commented. ![]() Would You Want Another Toy Like This? “I appreciate games and toys that challenge a child to think spatially,” Ledford said. Zuidema, however, added, “These aren’t the type of brainteasers Alyssa (8) will come back to again and again.” Timothy (15) and Andrew (12) thought Voxals would best appeal to puzzle lovers. Roundtable participants are former corporate accountant Robbin Dawson with Ethan (9) and Sara (6); Alison Shanahan with Elizabeth (15), Emily (13) and Katie (7); Teresa Wilson, editor of “HOMES Newsletter,” with Timothy (15), Andrew (12), Elise (9) and Steven (7); Jill Zuidema, former retail manager, with Alyssa (8); and Susan Ledford, editor of the "Homeschool Resources Directory for SC,” with Victoria (12), Joe (8) and Griffin (2). ![]() |
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