Modarri: The Ultimate Toy Car {2017 Holiday Gift Guide}

Every year on every occasion, kids receive countless toy cars as gifts. Kids will play these conventional toy cars for a week or so and remote-controlled cars might stay for a little bit longer. Afterwards, all of them will end up staying on the little one’s stash until the parents notice that it’s full of toy cars that no longer take the children’s interest. However, giving toy cars to your kids will enhance and refine some of their fundamental skills so you still end up giving it to them. Luckily, Modarri introduced our parents unconventional toy cars that will surely get the kids and even grownups hooked.

Modarri Car

Modarri

Just in time for Christmas, I received two sets of Modarri Buildable Cars. One contains the Delux S2 Muscle Car and the other actually has three cars in it (the S1, X1 and T1). At first, I got a little intimidated for my kids as each car has a total of 11 interchangeable pieces. I thought that this will provide confusion but when we took them off out of the packaging, I saw that it has only four screws retained on each car for assembly and they do not fall-off to save you the trouble of missing pieces. This also means that my kids will have so much pieces to mix-and-match with only a total of four cars on deck.

My kids were very busy and they were so much focused while exchanging parts and building them together. Modarri buildable cars allow your children to design and build their very own cars. What’s even better is that each car can be finger-driven as they have real-steering and suspension mechanics. This means that after spending some little time designing and building a car, kids can enjoy driving them with only the use of one finger. I tried driving one myself and I just have to put one finger on the driver’s seat and they really are smooth and bouncy and they can even do sharp turns, too.

I am very glad that I get to see my kids improve their fundamental skills such as their logic, creativity and imagination. I also noticed that my kids’ motor skills are being refined when building and playing the Modarri cars. In addition, both of them are trading pieces with each other to mix-and-match so I think this can also improve a child’s social skills.

Aside from the car parts, the package also has a swivel-tipped hex tool and it really brings out the mechanic within my children. I observed every piece of them and they all feel sturdy enough. The frames are made from metals and quality plastic. The linkages are just purely genius as they are mechanical. Even after building, it doesn’t have the feeling that it will fall-off as long as they are firmly screwed together.

I might be purchasing more Modarri buildable cars so my kids will also have greater choices in designing their cars. I am sure that they will not get tired of designing and building their own model cars.

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