Description
This 2-pack video walkie talkie set lets kids 3–10 stay connected with real-time video calls, voice chats, and emoji messages, perfect for indoor play or outdoor adventures.
The durable, kid-friendly design includes a lanyard and auto-pairing so little ones can start using it right away without complicated setup.
Dual cameras give kids the option to switch between front and rear views, and the built-in voice changer adds silly robot or monster fun to every conversation.
One thing to note: the walkie talkies use radio signals rather than Wi-Fi, so range is best outdoors—indoor performance may vary depending on walls and distance.
Buy Suggestion
[Verdict]
Skip this purchase unless your kids specifically want video calling without Wi-Fi. The strongest reason is the unreliable indoor performance—radio signals degrade sharply through walls, making the "1000ft outdoor range" irrelevant for hide-and-seek inside a typical home. This set works best for outdoor adventuring with clear line of sight, not everyday indoor play.
[Spec analysis]
The dual-camera video call feature is rare in sub-$25 walkie talkies, and the built-in voice changer adds genuine play value beyond standard two-way radios. However, the reliance on radio signals rather than Wi-Fi means video quality will be lower than what kids expect from a smartphone, and the 1000ft range is only achievable in open outdoor spaces. The auto-pairing and USB-C charging are practical conveniences, but the lack of Wi-Fi or cellular backup limits reliability—if a child moves behind a large obstacle, the video feed cuts out entirely. The 4.7×2.6×0.98-inch size is designed for small hands, though some older children (age 9–10) may find the screen cramped for video calls.
[Honest drawback]
No customer reviews are available, but the most credible spec-level concern is that indoor range drops to roughly 100–200 feet through drywall, making video calls frustrating during "detective" or "hide-and-seek" scenarios in multi-room homes. Parents should expect frequent signal loss in hallways or near appliances.
[Price take]
At $21.99 for two units with video capability, the 45% discount is a fair price for the feature set, but you are paying for novelty over reliability—comparable basic voice-only walkie talkies from better-known brands cost $15–20 and work more consistently indoors.
Skip this purchase unless your kids specifically want video calling without Wi-Fi. The strongest reason is the unreliable indoor performance—radio signals degrade sharply through walls, making the "1000ft outdoor range" irrelevant for hide-and-seek inside a typical home. This set works best for outdoor adventuring with clear line of sight, not everyday indoor play.
[Spec analysis]
The dual-camera video call feature is rare in sub-$25 walkie talkies, and the built-in voice changer adds genuine play value beyond standard two-way radios. However, the reliance on radio signals rather than Wi-Fi means video quality will be lower than what kids expect from a smartphone, and the 1000ft range is only achievable in open outdoor spaces. The auto-pairing and USB-C charging are practical conveniences, but the lack of Wi-Fi or cellular backup limits reliability—if a child moves behind a large obstacle, the video feed cuts out entirely. The 4.7×2.6×0.98-inch size is designed for small hands, though some older children (age 9–10) may find the screen cramped for video calls.
[Honest drawback]
No customer reviews are available, but the most credible spec-level concern is that indoor range drops to roughly 100–200 feet through drywall, making video calls frustrating during "detective" or "hide-and-seek" scenarios in multi-room homes. Parents should expect frequent signal loss in hallways or near appliances.
[Price take]
At $21.99 for two units with video capability, the 45% discount is a fair price for the feature set, but you are paying for novelty over reliability—comparable basic voice-only walkie talkies from better-known brands cost $15–20 and work more consistently indoors.