


ThinkPlay Shark and Crocodile Set
Two predators. One playroom. With 200 ThinkPlay pieces, your child can engineer a snapping crocodile—or swap it for a fierce shark. Coming soon: epic battles against the rest of the toy shelf.
$40
Quantity:
Just a heads-up! Sale goodies are final sale—no returns, refunds, or reward points (including on reviews). Occasionally they come with a tiny ding or dent, but nothing that takes away from the fun!
ThinkPlay Shark and Crocodile Set
Want to see your kid transform a pile of colorful pieces into a jaw-snapping crocodile or a sleek shark? With this wild ThinkPlay building set, kids can bring to life two amazing animals, each with moving parts like gears, wheels, and twisty, turny bits that make building feel more like play than work.
This isn't your average construction toy. ThinkPlay pieces twist, connect, and hinge in ways that make standard blocks jealous. Each 200-piece set comes with clear step-by-step guides for building both shark and crocodile models, but let's be real—half the joy is watching your child dream up his own wild creations.
Designed for kids ages 4 and up, the set sneaks in a heavy dose of STEAM learning. As he snaps and connects, your child sharpens hand-eye coordination, fine motor control, problem-solving skills, and spatial awareness. Bonus: He'll pick up early engineering concepts without even realizing it.
Parents, breathe easy—the pieces are built from high-quality, long-lasting plastic that's certified to meet EN71 and ASTM safety standards, and double-checked by Quatest 3 (because no one wants questionable toy plastic near little hands). The parts even play nicely with Duplo-sized bricks, so your existing stash just got a lot more interesting.
Everything packs neatly into a sturdy carton box, so clean-up won't send you into despair. And since ThinkPlay is an award-winning educational brand, you know this set is built to last through more than one wild building session.
Heads-up: Colors may vary, and only one model can be built at a time. The fun part? Mixing things up boosts those problem-solving skills!

