OVERVIEW
What it is
Don't Break the Ice is a kinetic game ideal for the preschool and early elementary crowd. You
Quick start rules
Place the ice into the blue holder. Place the guy into his designated spot. Each player takes turns knocking out one piece of ice using their hammer. The player who knocks the guy into the ice loses.
FIRST IMPRESSIONS
We were in search of kinetic games for our then-2 year old. She really enjoyed this one, though she regularly lost. We liked that "losing" often involved a lot of laughter (The guy fell down! It was absolutely hilarious, no matter whose fault it was.). And game play was really quick, so you could either fit in a bunch of sessions or you could play in just a couple of minutes when you didn't have a lot of time but just needed a board game fix.
WHAT WE THINK NOW
This is a cute but really fast game, given the amount of set up. While there's some strategy involved, it's definitely preschool-oriented, so strategy basically consists of "don't rip the ice out from right next to the guy."
My three year old says this is a fun game and it is easy.
My seven year old said it was okay.
MISCELLANEOUS INFORMATION
Suggested ages
Box: 4-6 years old
Developmental Skills Actually Necessary:
Players need the ability to take turns and strike hard enough to knock the ice out. While this isn't particularly hard, if you're looking at playing with a 1-2 year old, it might be just a bit too much to handle. Additional skills are needed if the child intends to win: the ability to realize that knocking out the last piece of ice holding "the guy" in will make him fall.
Rating and Maturity:
Totally family friendly. If you think about it too hard, as our seven year old tends to, you may get a little upset about the notion of the guy falling through the ice, "potentially to his death." But you have to be a little bit dark to think of it that way, and most kids aren't going to worry too much about that!
Play Time
Maybe 5-10 minutes, depending on how careful everybody is being. Set up takes longer.
Space Necessary
About 2 feet. Very little space required, unless you have a child who tends to jump around a lot, and then you just need whatever space that child requires.