A Busy Day at the Summit
The helicopter touches down on the highest peak, delivering the 'gold' bullion that needs to be transported down to the valley floor. This is where the real work begins. Your child becomes the site manager, using the rotary crank to lower the magnetic crane hook with precision. There's a satisfying 'click' as the magnet grabs the load, followed by the rhythmic winding motion to hoist it onto the waiting wagon. It's a physical, tactile process that keeps them fully absorbed without a single flashing light or battery.
Engineering Their Own World
Unlike static train sets, this mountain is built from modular blocks that can be stacked and rearranged. One day it's a single towering peak; the next, it's a sprawling range of tunnels and bridges. This flexibility supports spatial awareness, as children learn how changing the foundation affects the track gradient above. They aren't just pushing trains; they are constructing the landscape itself, testing stability and slope as they build.
Built for Heavy Lifting
Measuring approximately 110cm x 100cm when fully assembled, this set commands presence in a playroom. It serves as a central hub that breathes new life into existing track collections. The connection points are universal to the BRIO World system (and most standard wooden tracks), meaning those dusty straights and curves in the toy box suddenly have a new destination to connect to.