Skip to main content

Digital Trends may earn a commission when you buy through links on our site. Why trust us?

Osmo connects real kids’ toys with iPad games

tangible plays osmo connects real kids toys ipad
Image used with permission by copyright holder
Are your eyes getting tired just watching your kid stare endlessly at your iPad? What happened to real toys, you may ask yourself. Well, they haven’t gone anywhere, but building blocks and Crayola crayons just don’t seem to be getting the love they used to get. Now, a new startup called Tangible Play hopes to change that with Osmo, a app and hardware kit that takes real toys and connects them with your iPad.

Right now, the company has three different game sets that work with corresponding apps for iPad:

  • Tangram: This old-fashioned Tangram game brings back a wave of childhood memories.
  • Newton: Newton is a drawing app slash obstacle course.
  • Words: This is a Scrabble-like game that asks you to guess the correct word based on the letters you see on the screen.
Recommended Videos

All of these games include brightly colored, physical toys that connect in real-time to the apps on your iPad, where you see the difficult task that awaits you.

Please enable Javascript to view this content

Osmo GamesOnce you’ve downloaded the companion apps, all that’s left is to clip on the small, red mirroring device that reflects the gaze of your iPad’s camera 90 degrees downward to the table top or floor you are playing on with the physical toys. The camera than sends the visual information of what you are doing with the physical toys to the app, which then interprets and reflects your actions on the iPad screen. The apps use incredible optical recognition and artificial intelligence to understand what’s happening on the table and turns the iPad into a gaming screen.

The Tangram game is pretty self-explanatory. A specific shape appears on the iPad display and you then have to manipulate the puzzle pieces until you complete the design. When you get it right, the shape flashes on the screen. With Words, you try to form the correct word using physical letter tiles. Newton is the most original and video-game like of all the apps. To play, you take a piece of paper and a drawing implement. Then, you place an obstacle like keys or a toy dinosaur on the paper and try to create a structure with lines to avoid bouncing balls and hit targets.

The idea behind Osmo is that kids should actually play with real-world objects rather than limiting their interactions to a virtual reality onscreen. Real play is important because it helps develop fine motor skills, hand-eye coordination, and a strong social IQ (if they’re playing with their friends). Former Google employees and proud parents Pramod Sharma and Jérôme Scholler created Osmo to give their kids a new kind of toy that offers both physical and digital learning.

Right now, Osmo is in the early stages of a crowd-funding campaign. Pre-orders for the game bundle are available now for $49, but Osmo will retail for $99 when it reaches its $50,000 fundraising goal. The game apps and the toy kits are compatible with the iPad 2, iPad 3, iPad 4, iPad Mini, iPad Mini Retina, and iPad Air.

Available at: Amazon

Malarie Gokey
Former Digital Trends Contributor
As DT's Mobile Editor, Malarie runs the Mobile and Wearables sections, which cover smartphones, tablets, smartwatches, and…
You can now use an external webcam with Microsoft Teams on your iPad. Here’s how
Home screen layout of the 2024 iPad mini.

For a lot of people, the iPad is the device they choose to work with, which may include taking video calls. Though the front-facing camera on iPads has gotten better over time, many still prefer external webcams because they’re often much better than the built-in webcam on your tablet or even laptop. And now, if you use Microsoft Teams on iPad, you’re finally able to use external cameras, as Microsoft has announced via a blog post.

When we say "finally," it’s because Apple has included support for external USB-C cameras on the iPad since iPadOS 17. So technically, Microsoft is a little late to the party with this feature. But if you have to use Microsoft Teams for work and you tend to use the iPad most of the time, then this is certainly welcome news.

Read more
An Apple insider just gave us a hint about the M5 iPad Pro release date
Home Screen of the M4 iPad Pro.

Apple's line of iPad Pro tablets are almost powerful enough to work as complete laptop replacements, depending on your use case. When a new iPad is announced, it's big news — almost as big as when Apple confirms a release date.

While that hasn't happened just yet for the M5 iPad Pro, an analyst with a solid track record says to expect mass production in the second half of next year. Ming-Chi Kuo reported that time frame on Medium, and assuming this is accurate, it's safe to assume we can expect the M5 iPad Pro to be released sometime in late 2025.

Read more
I got an Apple Pencil Pro for my new iPad and found a big problem
An Apple Pencil Pro being held in a person's left hand with squeeze controls showing on an iPad mini 7 on top of a MacBook Pro keyboard.

Apple has brought some impressive improvements to this year’s iPad lineup. From an “impossibly thin” and powerful M4 iPad Pro to the Apple Intelligence-equipped iPad mini 7, there’s something here for everyone.

However, one of the unsung heroes of the lineup is the new Apple Pencil Pro, an advanced stylus with several new gestures that work hand in hand with Apple’s tablets to make drawing, sketching, and even just scribbling notes more intuitive than ever.

Read more