Farm animal games for kids 2-5
Game Educational
  • Offered By :

    Bebi Family: Educational Games for Kids
  • Vote :

    4.59
  • Downloads :

    100,000+
  • Age :

    Up to 5
  • Latest Version :

    1.01.24

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  • Offered By :

    Bebi Family: Educational Games for Kids
  • Vote :

    4.59
  • Downloads :

    100,000+
  • Age :

    Up to 5
  • Latest Version :

    1.01.24
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Editor's Review

My toddler actually asks for this one

I’ll be honest—most kids’ apps get deleted from my phone within a week. They’re either too flashy, too confusing, or they just don’t hold attention. But Farm animal games for kids 2-5 from Bebi Family has stuck around for months. My two-year-old loves the bright farm scenes with cats, ducks, dogs, horses, and geese. The animals are simple and friendly, not cartoonish in an overwhelming way. Each tap does something predictable—the horse neighs, the duck quacks—and that’s exactly what a toddler needs.

The game is built for ages up to 5, and it shows. There’s no text to read, no menus to navigate. Your kid just taps or drags, and the app responds. Puzzles are basic: matching an animal to its shadow, or putting a cow in a barn. The feedback is instant and positive. A star pops up, a happy sound plays. It’s not trying to teach complex concepts—it’s just letting little fingers explore cause and effect in a calm, colorful world.

What you actually get as a parent

No ads. No in-app purchases that trick your kid into buying coins. That alone is rare for a free game. The app has over 100,000 installs and a solid 4.59 rating, which makes sense once you use it. The sound effects are gentle, not jarring, and the music is the kind of soft lullaby that doesn’t drive you crazy on repeat. There’s also a timer feature—you can set play limits so the app locks after a few minutes. Perfect for keeping screen time in check without a meltdown.

The variety is decent for a toddler app. You get matching games, simple puzzles, and a few “find the animal” activities. It’s not endless, but for a two- or three-year-old, the repetition is actually a plus. They learn where the goose hides or how to drag the sheep into the pen. My kid now points at real geese and says “honk”—that’s a win in my book.

If your child is into animals and you want something that doesn’t feel like a cheap cash grab, give this a try. Just be ready for them to ask for the “horse game” every morning.

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