Game Info
Updated: N/A
Category: Puzzles
Score: 7.2
Best Games Card Color dino Dinosaur Educational free games for your site free html5 games for your website HTML5 html5 games for your site Kids Logic

How to Play

Match the egg with the corresponding dinosaur color

Description

So, World of Alice: Dino Colors sits right at the crossroads between playful distraction and sneaky learning—though it’s all pretty direct for the little ones. Here you’re basically helping Alice (well, her world) match colorful dinosaurs with their proper shades. It sounds simple at first, but I guess that’s the beauty for younger players. You just tap or click your way through, picking colors or dragging things around. There’s no complicated story getting in the way. It just gets down to business; pick a color, match it up, let’s see what happens. It doesn’t bombard you with instructions, which is actually refreshing. You’re trusted to figure it out as you go along. Pacing never feels rushed, either—children can poke around at their own pace without a countdown pressuring them. The visuals are bright enough to keep kids interested (dinosaurs never hurt), but not so busy that they distract from what you’re supposed to do. Some puzzles might feel too easy for adults hanging over a kid’s shoulder—it’s clearly designed for preschoolers or those just starting school. There’s not really anything in the way of unlocks or deep progression. That part really matters, really—some families want games that grow with their child’s skills. Overall? If you’re after something undemanding and cheery that gets children thinking about colors and how to follow instructions, it honestly does its job quite well.

Editor's View

I tried World of Alice: Dino Colors partly out of curiosity—mostly because my niece needed something new on my tablet. To be honest, my expectations were low since most color-matching kids’ games end up feeling repetitive fast. The dinosaur theme was enough to spark her interest immediately though (she likes anything prehistoric). What surprised me was how smoothly she picked things up without needing help every step. She loved tapping through the dinos and naming each color out loud—I guess sometimes you don’t need clever mechanics for young minds to stay engaged. Still, if there was one thing missing for me, maybe more variety would help keep repeat visits exciting? After two play sessions it did get a bit predictable even for her attention span. But as far as cheerful learning experiences go—it does what it sets out to do.