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Frog Board Games

Frogs are a common character in board games aimed at children. That could be due to their association with jumping. Depending on the game, the frogs can help a child learn how to count, exercise his memory or improve his fine motor skills.
  1. Leap Frogs

    • "Leap Frogs," also called "Leaping Frogs" in some editions, goes a little beyond a board game. It's a beanbag-toss game, only the beanbags are shaped like frogs. Kids stand close to the game and toss the beanbag frogs off a mini-trampoline and onto a lily pad target. The beanbags are small enough to fit easily in the hands of small children. The game is for two or more players and appropriate for ages 3 and up.

    Army of Frogs

    • The goal of "Army of Frogs" is to build an island of frogs with seven or more colored frog pieces. During each turn, players must move a frog piece to a new location, draw a new frog piece, or add a frog piece to the board. "Army of Frogs" is for two to four players ages 7 and up. The game box includes 40 frog pieces, four discs, a set of game rules and a cloth storage bag.

    Flippin' Frog

    • "Flippin' Frog" is an electronic game where players spring plastic frogs from a launcher toward a rotating tree. The player with the most frogs in the tree wins. Two to four players can play "Flippin' Frog" at a time. It is meant for kids ages 5 and up since the frog pieces are small. It comes with 24 frogs, four launchers, all the pieces to build the plastic tree, and an instruction sheet. "Flippin' Frog" is a Mattel game that requires three "AA" batteries.

    Froggy Boogie

    • "Froggy Boogie" is a memory game where baby frogs try to hop around the lily pads when the parent frogs aren't watching. Players select an "eyeball" for the parent frog. If a picture of a little frog is displayed under the eyeball, the baby frog must stay in his place. If no little frog is pictured, the baby frog may hop forward. The winner is the player who successfully remembers which eyes are watching and hops around the board first. "Froggy Boogie" is for two to six players age 4 and up. It was a 2008 "Golden Geek" nominee for best children's board game.


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