

🧩 Connect, Think, Win — The Family Brain Game You Can’t Miss!
Why Connect by Chalk and Chuckles is an award-winning educational board game designed for 2-4 players aged 6 and up. Crafted from eco-friendly cardboard and wood, it promotes cognitive development, critical thinking, and communication skills through creative tile connections. Easy to learn and travel-friendly, it’s the perfect gift for families seeking engaging, brain-boosting fun that transcends generations.




| ASIN | B07QJVCD5B |
| Assembly Required | No |
| Batteries Included? | No |
| Batteries Required? | No |
| Best Sellers Rank | #40,965 in Toys ( See Top 100 in Toys ) #1,398 in Board Games |
| Color | Multicolor |
| Customer Reviews | 4.2 4.2 out of 5 stars (241) |
| Date First Available | 11 August 2019 |
| Educational Objective(s) | Reasoning Game, Educational Game for kids 6 and up |
| Item model number | CCPPL017 |
| Language | English |
| Manufacturer recommended age | 6 - 7 years |
| Material Type(s) | Paper |
| Number of Game Players | 2 to 4 |
| Product Dimensions | 26.7 x 21.6 x 4.6 cm; 586 g |
| material_composition | Cardboard, Wood |
W**L
This game is FUN. I bought this game to use in speech therapy with my students, but I found kids like this game even when they’re not at school. My 6 year old niece had fun playing this game with me at home. In the speech therapy setting, it worked great for helping students working on word associations (chicken & egg, dirt & worm), categories and even just forming sentences with “because”. For kids that find it too difficult to play domino-style, you can just have them make sets of two.
A**R
The products were gifts for my grandchildren who live in Adelaide. They were very happy with their gifts.
E**A
Nice Game. Budget friendly
K**E
Birthday gift for grandchild to help entertain over the winter period.
S**E
I bought this to adapt to a game we can use at American Sign Language classes and meetups to practice vocabulary. We use a small adaptation to the rules, which requires a player to communicate the sign or fingerspell the words being compared, and then sign their reason for the connection. It works super well for simple signs and sentences, and I can see why it would be great for kids learning language and reasoning. For U.S. players, there are a few words that are British (tyre comes to mind), and for our ASL-needs, some are more specific than needed (like sparrow instead of just bird), but it works well. I am glad I got it and shared my ruleset with people on my ASL group. Just wish this was listed on BoardGameGeek so we could share this with more gamers!
Trustpilot
2 weeks ago
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