

✨ Light up your child's imagination with every roll! 🌟
PicassoTiles Motion Activated Marbles are an 8-piece set of multicolored, translucent marbles featuring built-in motion-activated LED lights powered by rechargeable lithium-ion batteries. Designed to enhance STEM learning, fine motor skills, and creativity, these glow-in-the-dark marbles perfectly complement magnetic marble run tracks, enabling engaging play in any lighting condition for children aged 3 and up.





















| ASIN | B08TMKXNM3 |
| Assembly Required | No |
| Batteries | 1 Lithium Ion batteries required. (included) |
| Batteries Included? | Yes |
| Batteries Required? | Yes |
| Best Sellers Rank | #3,055 in Toys ( See Top 100 in Toys ) #30 in Magnetic Building Toy Sets |
| Color | Multicolored |
| Customer Reviews | 4.5 4.5 out of 5 stars (5,365) |
| Date First Available | 16 June 2022 |
| Educational Objective(s) | Concentration, Construction Skill, STEM Skills |
| Item model number | PTG-LED-8PK |
| Manufacturer recommended age | 3 years and up |
| Material Type(s) | Plastic |
| Product Dimensions | 40.64 x 33.02 x 12.7 cm; 91 g |
| tech_spec_battery_description_toys | Built-in, Lithium-Ion, 1 battery |
خ**.
الصراحة روعه الحجم / الشكل / الاضاءة مناسب
G**N
Masterpiece
Superb
A**A
Absolutely amazing toy
kiss looove it, they get engaged for so long with this toy
F**L
Slow car speed and hard Marble tiles connecting
Marble run - the parts are too hard to connect to form a structure. It very clumsy and very hard to attach to each other. May be a 7+ can manage. Below 7 it would be hard for any kid Race Car - those doesnot comes with batteries and are too slow to go up the slope and mostly falls down.
S**H
Waste of money
I can’t understand why this has so many good reviews, the pieces are so hard to click together that my children can’t even play with this! What a waste of money!!
D**F
Parfait conforme à la description et bien emballé
B**N
This is the best gift. My 5 year old got it for Christmas and she is constantly building new tracks. My other kids - 8, 10 and 13, also really like it. They come up with new ideas to make bigger and longer tracks - down the hallway, down the stairs, etc. The only downside is they are hard to take apart for little hands. You have to pull pretty hard.
K**G
Perfect
K**A
My 4 year old great grandchild and I played with the marble run set for nearly two hours on the day the kit arrived. He already had the 100 "classic" set of Picasso tiles. When we discovered it was too difficult for him to attach the chutes to the special tiles, he was easily recruited to build boxes for height and to contain the marble at the end of the run. Hints for building a complex marble run. 1) The chutes don't attach or detach easily to the tiles even for an adult. That is good for the stability of the structure but bad for new designs. To detach the chutes from the tiles, you can use an old hotel key card or an expired credit card to lift up the end and gently pry the chute off the tile. 2) If there are enough of the tiles with the hole in the middle for your design, attach a tile to each end of the chute. Then you just need to rely on the magnets to attach different chutes to each other. Or build several sections with several chutes within the section and both section ends end in a magnet tile. Then you just connect the sections together using the built in magnets rather than having to attach a chute to a tile. This is especially important when building at several elevations. This will allow you to rapidly change the configuration. If you run out of the tiles with the hole in them, first priority for one tile on each end are the small curved chutes and the ones for changes in elevation. For really simple runs, using only ten chutes, you can attach each to two tiles with the hole in them and rapidly change your designs. (There are 21 tiles with the hole in them in the 50 piece set. ) 3) Be sure to build a "corral" for the marble at the end of the run or arrange that the marble will drop into a box. Otherwise you are going to be spending a lot of time searching for the marble which seems to love to roll under the couch. 4) The chutes look and feel flimsy but in actual use they are quite strong. I don't advise it but I actually used a dull butter knife to pry apart a chute and a tile without damage to either. Then I discovered an additional use of a credit card! 5) For height form a tube with two of the longest chutes face to face. The resulting tube is much more sturdy then building boxes to place on each other with the plain magnetic tiles. 6) The long curved green chutes are made to match the height of two magnetic tile boxes of the standard small square tiles in the Picasso set. 7) The small curved chutes fit perfectly within a box made from the standard small square tiles. 8) To involve the younger child in the building process, ask them to help build boxes from plain tiles to support the elevated chutes and to embellish the design by adding on "roofs" and "walls" around the route. Or ask the child which way the marble should go next and build accordingly.
K**S
My child love it
Trustpilot
3 weeks ago
1 month ago