

🎲 Level up your child’s emotional game — because feelings matter!
My Feelings is an educational game featuring 280 scenarios and 260 regulation strategies, plus 24 movement cards, designed to help children aged 4-9 express emotions, improve social skills, and develop self-regulation. Endorsed by renowned clinicians like Dr. Temple Grandin and Dr. Tony Attwood, it combines fun and expert guidance to foster emotional intelligence in a clinically trusted, engaging format.






| ASIN | B016VGFLSC |
| Best Sellers Rank | #204,944 in Toys & Games ( See Top 100 in Toys & Games ) #5,368 in Board Games (Toys & Games) |
| Customer Reviews | 4.3 4.3 out of 5 stars (829) |
| Is Discontinued By Manufacturer | No |
| Item Weight | 2 pounds |
| Item model number | FBA_55718 |
| Language | English |
| Manufacturer | Sensational Learners |
| Manufacturer recommended age | 4 - 9 years |
| Product Dimensions | 10.55 x 10.55 x 3.31 inches |
C**R
I use this in the Day Program
This was an awesome game for my clients to play. They enjoy learning about they're feelings and wanted to play the game again. Next month I will be doing a week on feeling and will pull out the game to be use. This also gave them away to express their feelings. I work with adults with DisABILITIES and they love the game
T**.
Wonderful game
Arrived quickly and in great condition. The game was a bit expensive but it has versatility. I use it with an ASD child to help him with emotional recognition and explanation. Cards are clear and colorful. Game board is good quality and sturdy.
B**K
Pretty good game
My 4yo really enjoyed playing this game. He has a long attention span so we were able to play the whole game through without him disengaging. I have two comments though. My son loves the book all about my feelings. I struggle because it fails to highlight that all kids have all emotions every day. Also, portraying a girl as happy and a boy as angry is an unfortunate message that our children get. It would be nice to not have to delve into sexism. Also, the kids of color have what most people would consider a negative feeling. Again, the game reinforces implicit bias.
S**T
Wonderful game for children with ASD
Bought this for my daughter who is 4 and has Autism. It helps her express her feeling or at least describe them. Great game!
N**H
Striving to be a hands on grandma
I found the angry and frustrated faces confusing. But it got my 5 year old grandson reading the cards and talking about emotions and gave a few tips on dealing with situations. And the "Silly" things in between were a nice touch, got him laughing, and broke up the heaviness of some of the other cards. Not something would recommend for every day use, but good for starting conversations going or a round about way to tackle emotional situations. It got him to open up to me about a bully on school bus, later in the week.
B**K
Great educational game
Really fun for the whole family. Provoked good thought processes for my three year old. This game was a great learning tool both for understanding feelings and introduction to playing boardgames. We particularly loved "silly time"
T**N
It's ok but boring after a short while. I like the concept.
One goes around the board and most of the spaces are a picture of a kid expressing a feeling. So the child identifies the feeling (there's no wrong answer of course and that's a good thing) and is given a card for it. What's the problem? The same space pictures are repeated over and over again! Only one picture per feeling times 10. Why not have a unique picture per space? Or use real photographs? That way we get mixed genders/races and a whole spectrum of emotions. On the plus side, there are abundant cards and I like the ability to give one's own answer. And silly time is great. If the goal is for the child to open up for a moment, this could work once or twice as the game is right now. Better design would increase it's value and repeatability.
N**A
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C**S
This game - encourages kids to talk about their feelings - helps parents learn and understand what their children are going through - shows kids that EVERYONE has those feelings - helps kids learn and understand what their parents are going through. The best part is, as long as parents remember not to judge or try to correct any answers, the kids just think they're playing a game. Silly Time makes it extra fun.
K**A
My kids mental health RN suggested this and they all love it! Fun and they learn about emotions and how to regulate them better
D**L
The game was a tad too easy for my 8 year old, but my 6 year old loved it. The "Silly Time" cards were far too easy. Overall good fun.
R**R
I love Feelings games very much I know I got 2020-02-04 but it gas helped my child to express her feelings in a possitive way. I think anyone who has children who can't seem to express how they feel should think about getting this game it does help.
C**N
I personally think this is a really great game - it's just long and gets boring for kids to be honest. Kids seem to lose interest in this before it's half over. Quality is great though!
Trustpilot
2 months ago
3 days ago