My three-year-old nephew has this thing about vegetables. He won't eat them, but he loves sorting them by color on my phone. That's basically how I ended up testing "Toddler games for 3 year olds" from ilugon, and honestly, it's been a weirdly pleasant surprise.
Fruit and vegetable matching that actually sticks
The core of this app is pretty straightforward: kids tap, drag, and match fruits and vegetables. You get puzzles where a tomato goes with a red circle, or a banana gets paired with its silhouette. It sounds simple, but there's a nice rhythm to it. The app doesn't rush your kid — no timers, no score counters, no "you lost" screens. Just a gentle nudge if they tap the wrong thing, and then they try again. My nephew spent ten solid minutes matching apples to apples (literally) without getting bored, which is basically a miracle at that age.
There are about a dozen mini-games here. One lets you sort produce by color — red strawberries go with red apples, yellow bananas with yellow corn. Another is a shadow-matching game where you drag a fruit onto its outline. A third has you feed a cartoon monster the correct food. Each game reinforces the same basic vocabulary: names of fruits and vegetables, their colors, their shapes. It's repetitive by design, but for a toddler, repetition is how learning happens. The illustrations are bright and friendly, not cluttered. The sound effects are cheerful without being annoying — no ear-piercing jingles, just soft pops and claps when they get it right.
What I appreciate most is the lack of ads. You can play the whole thing without a single interruption. There's a paid version that unlocks a few extra games, but the free content is generous enough that you won't feel pressured. The app also has a simple settings menu where you can turn off music or reset progress, which is handy if you've got multiple kids sharing the same device.
If your kid is in that 2-to-4 sweet spot and you're looking for something that teaches food names without feeling like homework, this is a solid pick. One tip: let them play with the sound on at first. The voiceovers say each fruit's name aloud, and that repetition helps a lot. My nephew now points at broccoli in the grocery store and says "green tree." Close enough.