Coloring your way through storybook land
There's a certain magic in watching a kid discover fairy tales for the first time. Art Games for Kids: Bibi Tales from Bibi.Pet tries to bottle that magic into a coloring app, and honestly, it mostly works. You get classic stories like Alice in Wonderland, Pinocchio, and Puss in Boots, but instead of just reading them, your child gets to color the characters and scenes.
The interface is dead simple. No menus to navigate, no confusing buttons. Kids as young as two can just tap and start scribbling. Each storybook page becomes a coloring canvas, with big, chunky lines that are easy for small hands to stay inside. The color palette is basic — maybe a dozen or so colors — which is fine for the target age. You don't need a thousand shades when you're three years old and just discovered that the sky can be purple.
What I appreciate is that it's not trying to be a full-blown game. There are no timers, no scores, no "you failed" screens. It's just quiet, creative play. The fairy tale themes give it a nice structure — your kid isn't just coloring random shapes, they're coloring the White Rabbit's pocket watch or Geppetto's workshop. That little bit of context goes a long way for engagement. The drawings themselves are cute and simple, matching the art style you'd expect from a preschool app.
That said, it's not perfect. The app has a 3.27 rating on Google Play with only about 10,000 installs, and some of the complaints are fair. A few users mention that the free version is limited — you get a handful of pages and then hit a paywall. The sound effects can get repetitive after a while, and there's no undo button if your kid accidentally colors over something they liked. For a paid app, those are reasonable gripes.
Still, for parents looking for a low-pressure, screen-time activity that feels more like play than passive consumption, Bibi Tales fits the bill. Best for ages 2 to 5 who already love stories and crayons. One tip: turn off the sound effects in the settings if they start to drive you nuts — your kid won't even notice.