


More than 8,000 have been sold since July.īut it's not every potential customer's idea of a fun Christmas - after a turbulent year dealing with the real Coronavirus.
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"In record time we managed to create a toy that in a way allows children to learn about the virus, how to defend themselves against the virus, how to do things that allow them to protect from and attack the virus and they can have fun while doing it." while also being educational and practical. Over the border in Portugal, Science4You is appealing to older children with a distinctly 2020 twist on standard home science kits.īoss Miguel Pina Martins says his anti-virus lab is just that. "I think it fits in with reality, so children get used to what is in society, the dolls have to represent society." If it is necessary for us, it also makes children aware about the mask when putting it on their dolls." "Great, it's something that reflects the times we are living in. The response from parents shopping for presents at this Madrid toy store was positive: And also it makes it just normal to wear a mask." It’s very important that she is wearing a mask to show the example to the kids. "When the pandemic started we noticed that the kids were always having a tendency to imitate what the adults do, starting to want to put masks on their dolls, and we decided to actually produce a doll with a mask, Nancy mask, and it was really good because Nancy is a reference for the kids and for them it is an example. Unfortunately for this particular Bellie, being screened by Famosa chief executive Marie-Eve Rougeot, the diagnosis is not a good one.

This Bellie doll is being tested for the Coronavirus - not for real but as part of one of the hot selling toys this Christmas from Spanish toymaker giant Famosa.
