
Top-rated products in the Sorting games category
Here's a ranking of the top rated products in this category. To give you a quick overview, we've also added some key information about the products.
1. Spielba Puzzle wild animals with Griffli
The beautiful wildlife puzzle consists of 8 different animals. To make it easy to remove the pieces from the puzzle, they are equipped with a handle. It helps in recognizing shapes and animals and promotes motor skills.

2. Spielba Vehicles large with handle
The beautiful puzzle consists of 18 different vehicles. To make it easy to remove the pieces from the puzzle, all are equipped with a handle. It helps to recognize shapes and familiar modes of transport and promotes motor skills.

3. Spielba Wooden Puzzle ABC
The beautifully crafted puzzle teaches the alphabet from A to Z and promotes your child's motor skills. By inserting the letters, children learn the ABCs or the numbers from 1 to 26. To ensure that the wooden pieces provide active support, a playful and colorful design has been chosen. The puzzles are made from plywood. We recommend these puzzles for children aged three and up.

4. Fat Brain Toys InnyBin
The six shape pieces are designed with different textures. There is a cube, a diamond, a sphere, a triangle, a flower, and the cheerful Fat Brain logo. But the best part? When children push the shapes through the cube's rubber bands, their curiosity is sparked, and they begin to explore, experiment, and discover.

5. small foot Stacking Tower Tiger Safari
Stacking tower or wobbly pyramid? Both. This friendly tiger takes shape as soon as children stack the colored wooden rings of his body in the right order. Hand-eye coordination and an understanding of shapes and sizes are trained as the 7-piece wild animal is put together. Also as a wiggle tower an educational game of skill for the little ones. This child-friendly motor skills game in modern colours provides long-lasting fun. Thus, the little ones do not get bored so quickly.

6. Plantoys Sorting and counting cups
The company PlanToys sources the wood for its toy production from its own rubber tree plantation. When a tree can no longer produce rubber due to its old age, it is cut down and taken to the factory for further processing. As part of the implemented reforestation program, a new tree is planted for every tree that is cut down to close the ecological gap created. In the factory, the solid wood from the felled rubber trees is ultimately used to manufacture the toys. For painting them, exclusively water-based dyes are used.

7. Goula Baby Color
The child learns to recognize colors and match them to the correct place. For this, the large wooden buttons are inserted into the right holes to complete the pictures.

8. small foot Colourful
This stacking toy in bright colors encourages children to independently compare, sort, count, measure, and structure. This solid wooden toy stands out for its simplicity and clarity. The sensory area of touch and feel is particularly developed here. Through the differentiation of various weights and the assignment to different stacking devices, children develop perception and intelligence while having fun with the stacking game.

9. Hape Creative jigsaw puzzle
For beginners, the base pieces can be separated, allowing your child to focus on just one of the blocks at first. Once they understand the principle of stacking the shapes, the other base pieces can be added. To help your child become more confident in recognizing colors, you can give them additional tasks: Which blue is lighter? Which green is darker? How do you get the color pink? Or orange?.

10. small foot Carrots
Pulling carrots in a different way. This colorful, child-friendly stacking and sorting game made of wood follows Montessori principles and encourages children to independently compare, sort, count, and structure. The goal is to match the seven differently sized carrots to the corresponding holes in the garden bed. Green felt appliqués give the carrots a realistic design, making them ideal as role-play toys for little vegetable gardeners. Through this Montessori-inspired sorting game, children subtly train their fine motor skills, perception, as well as size understanding and classification.
