Educational toy videos kids actually learn from.
ToyLearn TV is a curated library of toy unboxing and play videos that teach colors, shapes, numbers, and letters using brand-favorite toys — LeapFrog, Fisher-Price, Melissa & Doug, Play-Doh, and Orbeez. Every clip is hand-screened for pace, tone, and content before it lands on the page.
What is your child curious about today?
Learning with the toys you already trust
LeapFrog
41 videos · Phonics, numbers, and music toys built for early learners.
BrandFisher-Price
48 videos · Classic chunky toys that teach colors, shapes, and cause-and-effect.
BrandMelissa & Doug
58 videos · Wooden puzzles, sorters, and pretend play sets for toddlers.
BrandPlay-Doh
54 videos · Open-ended dough play for colors, counting, and fine motor skills.
BrandOrbeez
33 videos · Colorful sensory bead play for sorting and color recognition.
Find the right pace for your child
18–24 months
36 videos · Slow, calm clips for the youngest watchers — naming and pointing.
Age2-year-olds
81 videos · Short, predictable scenes with chunky toys and clear narration.
Age3-year-olds
75 videos · Counting, color sorting, and early letters with brand-favorite toys.
Age4-year-olds
42 videos · Letter sounds, numbers to twenty, and pretend-play scenarios.
Fresh from the playroom
Made for tiny hands and big imaginations
ToyLearn TV is a small, independent studio of parents, early-childhood teachers, and toy collectors. We hand-screen every video for pace, tone, and content before it lands on a shelf. We avoid loud sound effects, fast cuts, scary characters, and pushy commercial language. Instead, we lean into warm voices, natural light, and toys that invite open-ended play.
The site is organized around three lenses: concept (colors, shapes, numbers, letters, counting, animals), brand (LeapFrog, Fisher-Price, Melissa & Doug, Play-Doh, Orbeez), and age (18 months to 4 years). Pick whichever lens matches your child today, watch a single clip with them, and head straight to the toy basket when it ends. The transition from screen to toy is where the deepest learning happens.