Goki Coloured Tumbling Tower Wooden Block Game

£12.99

21 in stock

21 in stock

Only customers who have purchased this product may leave a review.

The Goki Coloured Tumbling Tower brings a lively test of nerve and concentration to family gatherings, parties, or quiet afternoons at home. Players take turns carefully removing a wooden block from anywhere within the tower and placing it back on the very top, building an ever-taller and increasingly precarious structure. Brightly coloured in red, yellow, and blue, the wooden blocks add a vibrant visual element to every round, making the game as eye-catching as it is tense. A steady hand and careful planning are essential – one clumsy move and the whole tower comes crashing down, which never fails to draw laughter from everyone around the table.

This coloured tumbling tower is produced by Goki, a brand known for quality wooden toys, and the game supports the development of strategic thinking and fine motor control in players of all ages. The format encourages turn-by-turn decision-making, as each participant must assess the tower's stability before committing to a block. Because the rules are straightforward to grasp, younger children and adults can compete together on equal footing, making the coloured tumbling tower a genuinely cross-generational activity. It is a solid choice for households looking to add a skill-based, screen-free game to their collection.

Frequently Asked Questions

The set contains 45 wooden blocks arranged in 15 levels, giving an assembled starting height of approximately 15 cm (4.8 cm square). As blocks are removed and restacked on top, the tower grows taller - and considerably more precarious.
Goki recommends the game for children aged 4 and above. The blocks are generously sized and free from sharp edges, making them safe for primary-school-age children to handle independently. Younger children should be supervised, partly because the small painted blocks could present a risk if mouthed by toddlers.
The red, yellow, and blue colouring is primarily visual - adding brightness and making the tower easy to photograph for the family album - but many players invent their own colour-based house rules, such as requiring a specific colour to be removed each turn, which adds an extra layer of strategy to the standard game.