
A wooden tactile matching game with cylinders that make different sounds when shaken — match pairs by sound and texture.
How it helps: Listening carefully to shake, compare, and match sounds builds auditory discrimination, an often-overlooked sensory skill alongside touch and sight — useful for kids who are working on careful listening or auditory processing.
How to use it: Play together as a quiet, focused matching game. Therapists often use sound-matching sets like this for auditory processing goals or as a calm, structured activity between more active tasks.