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Crocodile Dentist from Winning Moves

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Minimum Age: 4 years
Rating:     
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
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Our Editorial Review
Product Description Poor old croc has a tooth that's bothering him; pretend to be a dentist to help him out. Press the wrong tooth and he'll surprise you. With no loose parts and exciting snapping jaws, this is one game that will thrill toddlers and primary schoolers alike. No batteries required.
Customer Reviews
Cheap, Entertaining Toy for Preschoolers     Posted 16 November 2008 I bought this when my twins were 3 1/2. It was a cheap item, there are no pieces to lose, and it's simple enough that the girls can play together. If they want you to play with them, the game is very quick. The top jaw has fallen off a few times but I think this was my girls' fault - too rough with it - and each time, I've snapped it back on.
Amusing     Posted 11 November 2008 I have a granddaughter and grandson between the ages of 2 and 3. My grandaughter who is braver enjoyed this game with me. We got a kick out of it. My grandson was scared of it and is hesitant to play with it. he enjoys watching me play with it.
Its small so its easy to bring along with you on your travels.
It's not something that my grandchildren rush to play with but to be honest at this age there arent many things they rush to play with for more than 5 minutes with anyway.
I will take it out and we will spend about 10 - 15 minutes playing with it. That's pretty good for them.
Ridiculously funny     Posted 06 November 2008 You just can't help but laugh. It is just really funny how tense people get as more teeth get pushed... After only a little while we had to institute a "You touch it, you push it" rule, because the kids would start to try to feel that tiny little bit of extra resistance when they get to the trigger tooth.
About the durability, yeah, it won't last forever, and eventually the hinge starts to wear out. The top jaw might come off, but most of the time you can pop it back on. If it does break, though, you can take it apart and try to figure out how a mechanical (read, nondigital) device can randomly choose a tooth to be the next trigger. A clever little bit of engineering inside.
Smaller than the original but fun     Posted 03 November 2008 I ordered this product because my daughter loved her cousins. Strangely, when I received it I was surprised that it was a MUCH smaller version than the one her cousin has! I bumped down the durability because of this. It is more of a travel version but it is still a fun game with a nice element of surprise. My daughter enjoyed this at the age of 2-3.
great fun from my son's perspective..     Posted 06 October 2008 I purchased this toy because my son liked it when he played with it at a friend's birthday party. It is a lot of fun from his point of view. No real set-up, fancy rules, or parts to lose, so it is great from my point of view too! We made up our own rules, he who gets bitten first is the winner! I'm not too concerned about the 'educational value' - it is just silly fun...
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