The toy that turns your whole house into word practice
Talking Dino Flash Cards: Words Stick On Real Things
The stickers live on your actual fridge, chair, and milk jug. He reads them right off the object. No slot. No buttons.
One showing. Then kids can run him alone.
592 Words and Concepts
I was worried he'd never touch it after day two but the stickers stay on the fridge so it can't get buried with the other toys so he always notices it. Love it!!!
14,000+ Moms Who Ditched The Deck
Talking Dino Flash Cards: Words On Real Things
Helped with numbers
Bought it for words but he learned to count to ten before I even noticed he was running the number cards every morning by himself.
Perfect gift idea
If you're the aunt who wants to give something that actually gets used, this is it. My sister's twins are 3 and barely talking, and I watched them run around tapping every sticker two weeks after I gave it to them. She texted me that it's the only gift they haven't lost interest in.
Worried about waste
I almost didn't buy it because we have a bin full of toys he touched once. But the stickers go on the actual fridge and he runs over to them every morning. Worth it.
He says 'milk' now
We stuck the milk sticker on the fridge and within three days my son started saying 'milk' when he wanted it instead of just pointing and grunting. He taps the dino on it every morning before breakfast and I hear him say it clear as day. That alone was worth it.
Still using it weeks in
I thought he'd forget about it after two days but he taps the fridge sticker every morning on his own now.
Works around naps
I'm home with two under three and there's no good window for a sit-down lesson. The stickers stay on the pantry door and the bathroom sink, so he just taps them when we're in there anyway. No scheduling required.
Helped with goodbye
I got this for words but it actually helped with drop-off. He taps "bye-bye" on the door every morning now and it made that whole routine easier somehow.
Perfect for speech moms
If you're doing speech support at home and need something he'll actually use between sessions, this is it. My son taps the milk sticker every morning now and I hear him say "milk" without me standing there with a flashcard. It's practice that doesn't feel like practice, and that's the whole battle with a 3-year-old.
Worth every penny
I kept adding it to cart and deleting it for a week, finally bought it when speech eval came back, so glad I did.
Flashcard time ended at 40 seconds. Now the house does it.
No more lesson tears.
Flashcard time asks a toddler to sit still, hold a card right, and perform. Most kids give you 40 seconds before the deck hits the floor.
This dino flips it. Set him on a card and he says the word. The sensor on his base reads it, no slot to fumble. After one showing, your child runs him alone.
The 6 sticker sheets move the words off the table. Stick one on the fridge. Stick one on the chair. Stick one on the milk jug. He reads them there.
Your child hears "milk" standing at the actual milk. Not a picture at a table while you hold his attention. The word arrives with the real thing in the real room, which is how words stick for kids who won't sit for a lesson.
Why Parents Choose This Dino
Regular flashcard sets ask a toddler to sit still and perform, and most kids last about 40 seconds before the cards end up on the floor. This dino moves the words off the table and onto the real fridge, chair, and milk jug, so word practice happens all day without you running a lesson. The stickers stay on the house, the sorting rings keep sessions small, and 592 words across 5 categories means he grows from first words to full sentences.
Why Parents Choose This Dino
Regular flashcard sets ask a toddler to sit still and perform, and most kids last about 40 seconds before the cards end up on the floor. This dino moves the words off the table and onto the real fridge, chair, and milk jug, so word practice happens all day without you running a lesson. The stickers stay on the house, the sorting rings keep sessions small, and 592 words across 5 categories means he grows from first words to full sentences.
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Talking Dino
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Card Decks
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Stays in use
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Usable by 2-year-old
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Words with real objects
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Grows with child
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Works without sit-down
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Practice daily
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Words Stick. House Does the Work.
We surveyed 1,800+ parents, the numbers tell the story.
Words Stick. House Does the Work.
We surveyed 1,800+ parents, the numbers tell the story.
Still Using After 30 Days
Category Decks Included
Words and concepts to master
Turn ordinary moments into word practice with the Talking Dino. 148 double-sided cards, 592 words and concepts, stickers for the house, and a sensor that reads anywhere he's placed.
Flashcard time just ended. Now the house teaches.
Your toddler won't sit for a lesson, but he'll tap the fridge 40 times a day. Stick the word labels on the real refrigerator, the real chair, the real milk jug, and the dino reads each one out loud when your child places him there. The words arrive with the actual object in the actual room, which is how language sticks for kids who bolt after two cards.
How It Works At Your House
Stick It
Put a sticker on the fridge, the chair, the milk jug. He reads them there.
Show Once
Place the dino on a sticker. He says the word out loud.
Watch Him Go
After one try, your child runs the dino on his own all day.
The house is the deck. The practice happens without you running it.
No slot to fumble. No buttons to master. The sensor on his base reads whatever he's placed on, so toddler hands just set him down and hear the word. After one showing, kids run him alone.
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592 words across 5 decks
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Stickers turn objects into prompts
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Sorting rings keep sessions small
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Works independently after one demo
Talking Dino Flash Cards Questions
He'll run it himself. The sensor on the dino's base reads whatever he's placed on, so there's no slot to line up and no buttons to master. After one showing, most kids place him and listen entirely on their own.
This flips the whole setup. The dino says the word when your child places him, no performance required, and the stickers move the words onto the actual fridge, chair, and milk jug so he's learning at the real object in the real room, not at a table during a lesson.
Yes, because the stickers let him hear the word standing at the actual milk, sitting in the actual chair. He's building the connection between the word and the real thing he touches and uses, which is how words move from recognition to functional use.
The stickers live on the fridge, the chair, and the milk jug, so the house itself is the game and the dino can't get buried in the toy bin. The sorting rings let you rotate fresh words in as he masters old ones, and 592 words across 5 categories is months of material. Kids tap the stickers unprompted days later.
Ages 2 and up with adult supervision. The 148 double-sided cards scale from first words and numbers for toddlers and late talkers all the way to full sentences for preschoolers starting to read. Cards and stickers are small parts, so keep the set away from children under 3 during unsupervised play.