
Sound Safari
Toddler-friendly phonics. Hear letter sounds, blend them into simple words, and match what you hear to pictures. A first step toward reading, with no reading required.
About Sound Safari
A child taps a letter, hears its sound, and then tries to match that sound to a picture on screen. That's the core loop of Sound Safari — simple enough for a two-year-old, structured enough to build real phonics foundations. Letters are introduced one at a time, with clear audio and bright illustrations that do all the heavy lifting, so kids can participate long before they know how to read a single word.
The blending activities are where things get interesting. After a handful of letter sounds feel familiar, short consonant-vowel-consonant words start coming together — cat, dog, bin — and kids hear how individual sounds snap into something recognizable. It's a small moment, but for a toddler it lands hard. If your child enjoys this, Letter Zoo makes a natural next step with its alphabet-animal card format. Both sit comfortably in the education category alongside other early-learning tools.
Best experienced on a tablet with the volume up — the audio cues carry most of the instruction, so headphones or a decent speaker make a real difference.
How to use
Tap a game tile to start. Letter Sounds plays every letter of the alphabet with its example word. Make Words builds simple words from letter cards. Listen & Tap finds the picture that matches the word you hear. Read the Word is the harder version without pictures. Parents: tap the gear icon for sound and reset.
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