My DS is three next week. I applied for this to see if an "interactive" soft toy would engage him anymore than normal soft toys that are normally spurned. He is fixated on action figures and toys that do things, so I wondered if this would make him see soft toys in a new light.
Q1 What were your first impressions of Winnie? What did your child think/ say?
DS knew exactly what he was "that's Pooh Bear, Mummy" (not sure how, to my knowledge he's never seen Pooh Bear - I blame nursery). Sadly it took Mummy about 45 mins to take him out of the carton so the excitment had somewhat dissipated by the time I manage to set him free. First impressions were that he was a decent size but that his voice was deeply irritating.
Q2 How was the set up process?
I found that he was incredibly complicated to set up - and his voice increasingly irritating. I went through the process about 3 times before I didn't press the wrong nose or hand at the end and have to start again. I would have thought a process for the "parent" setting him up where he didn't talk VERY slowly would be sensible? I found it odd that every task was half an hour apart from each other - bedtime in total for DS is 30 mins (to include snack, bath, teeth and story) and yet going by Winnie this should have taken 2 hours. Perhaps I missed something and I must admit to setting him up at the end of a long working day and being rather short tempered with him.
Q3 Did your child interact well with Winnie? What about with his routines during the day?
I don't think this bear is made for a child in full time nursery! As Pooh expects every routine to take 2 hours +, he's simply not quick enough for us. I get out of bed, washed, dressed (whole family) and to nursery for 7.30am in the morning and pick DS up at 6-6.30pm and DS is in bed by 7-7.30pm. Poor Pooh can't catch up! He needs to work by the minute, not by the half hour. Equally, at weekends, our routines are very different - lie ins (including DS) til 8.30-9am and bedtime is much later. I don't want Winnie waking DS up at 6.30am on a weekend. Pooh then starts off yawning at 6.30pm on a weekend and then won't "play" as he's in night mode, or alternatively on a work night we're out of the door in the morning before Pooh has had chance to clean his teeth. I think an alternative setting for weekends would be good - I suppose I could have reset him but that was a nightmare to begin with.
Q4 Did your child play with Winnie in hide and seek mode?
DS did like this but bored quite quickly, but in order to play this with him I had to reset him as (as above) by the time we got home in the evening, usually about 6.30pm, Pooh had started getting ready for bed and wouldn't play. So I reset him so we could play with him to get up at 5am and go to bed at 11pm. Problem I soon found with this was that I got woken up in the night by Pooh even when he was downstairs. He's quite loud. I ended up having to turn him off.
Q5 What were your thoughts about the 50 different phrases that Pooh says at different times in the day?
I'm not sure I've heard them all. I will say that I found Pooh to be irritating but he did seem to amuse DS, if only for a short time. Pooh was not allowed in DS's bedroom at night though "Pooh has to stay downstairs Mummy". DS did mention that Pooh can talk without moving him mouth, so that must have intrigued him. Sadly, Pooh has not been played with anymore than any other soft toy - although I did catch him feeding him chocolate buttons one evening and on another occasion poor Pooh was being fed to a TRex, so DS did "play" with him, but not in the "companion" sense.
Q6 Winnie sells for £39.99 - how much would you expect to pay for this toy?
To be honest, I wouldn't buy him, so it's a little difficult to decide how much he's worth. Seeing the price of toys, I suspect that's about right - but for me he was just too complicated to set up and didn't fit into our lives as we don't have fixed and very long routines everyday!
He is nice to have around though... when he's switched off!