







🚀 Elevate your desk game with a rocket that’s as smart as you are!
The 3D Metal Puzzle Rocket Building Kit is a 168-piece DIY metal model that functions as both a pen holder and phone stand. Designed for ages 6+, it combines STEM learning with stylish industrial decor, offering a hands-on assembly experience that enhances creativity, problem-solving, and workspace organization. Perfect for gifting or personal use, it transforms your desk into a conversation-starting showcase.










| ASIN | B0FF61VZ25 |
| Best Sellers Rank | #241,406 in Toys & Games ( See Top 100 in Toys & Games ) #7,806 in Toy Building Sets |
| Customer Reviews | 4.6 4.6 out of 5 stars (25) |
| Item Weight | 11.2 ounces |
| Item model number | YK700S |
| Manufacturer | Jixin Xyzhi |
| Manufacturer recommended age | 6 years and up |
| Product Dimensions | 4.7 x 4.3 x 7.9 inches |
R**N
Great way to help kids understand how things go together and develop basic tool skills
One Christmas long ago I gazed enviously at the Erector Set my brother had just unwrapped. It had all kinds of cool parts that looked just like this and you could assemble them into motorized robots that actually rolled around on wheels and all kinds of other amazing constructions. I was so jealous! If he felt the same way about my Easy-Bake oven complete with cake mixes you baked with a light bulb, he didn't let on. In those days there were boy toys and girl toys. I wanted to take wood and metal shop classes in junior high school instead of sewing and cooking (which I already knew how to do) but girls weren't allowed to. Now my brother has a granddaughter who last Christmas requested her own set of basic tools. I got this to see if it would be an appropriate skill level for them to assemble together. The rocket looks really cool and I love that the instructions are all pictures, which will help prepare her for a life assembling furniture purchased from big box stores. The diagrams are fairly easy to follow once you wrap your brain around them, and the tools are the right size for small hands. One thing that seems to be missing is a comprehensive parts list. I have trained my daughter to always inventory the parts in the box to make sure everything is there before you start assembling it. There's nothing more frustrating than getting halfway through building something and figuring out that you're missing a crucial part. Then you have to take it all apart again and try to cram it back into the box to return it. This shows the parts needed for each step, so you have to sort the parts by step to figure out if everything is there. What I don't know is how versatile this kit is. Will she be able to think of ways to put these parts together into other constructions like you could with the old Erector Sets? Only time will tell. But this is a great starter kit for stoking her imagination, helping her understand how things go together and develop basic tool skills. What a bargain for $20! And meanwhile I love my new rocket phone holder that I just had fun assembling.
L**A
As advertised
Item is as pictured and advertised. Really cute that works for a display item and also for holding pencils and such. If your kids are younger, they will need assistance in building this. However, there are really detailed instructions included.
A**A
The completed rocket is ridgid and quite adequate. Some red fins are plastic
I know what you're thinking. Erector Set. Not quite. I keep looking at the images, trying to invision a "metal rocket ship". I guess if I cross-eye squint at dusk or dawn... The parts: So, the squarish base is stout metal, the shiny parts are metal and two of the "red things" are a thicker metal..perhaps alluminum. The rest of the "red things" are a thin a.b.s. type material. The hardware is "erectorish sized" The instructions are "legoish". Everything is straight forward. What could possibly go wrong...? Not much. I would estimate the hex nuts and bolts (or screws?..its 4 a.m.) to be a little smaller than the old erector set square nuts and flat drive pan head machine screws. I can see one fumble lingering the little fasteners. I recommend a pencil size/type magnetic pickup tool for retrieval of detectors. Appropriate/suitable magnetic.... wrenches, sockets and associated drivers may help keep the little boogers in order for installing/mating the threaded fasteners. So, the shiny metal multi drilled strips have a slight bend, perpendicular with their length to give rigidity and I don't recall any sharp edges. They are much thinner than the old erector versions but seem sufficient for the application, given the size of the model and its intended purpose. Relatively easy to assemble dependant on ones manual dexterity, vision and hand/eye coordination. The completed unit is fairly sturdy due to its compact size and quantity of parts. Its almost like a "lamination" strength. Strength in numbers. I would not purchase larger model items based on the scale of the parts being this thin and small. I would hope for more robust parts that are better suited for the larger models in which they are scaled up to meet the structural needs of larger finished models. There are so many promising possibilities. I'll be watching for similar items from this category of metal erection sets...terrible erector?
K**N
I like it!
I'm in the midst of doing this right now. I guess I should let you know that I do a lot of the 3D wooden puzzles and book nooks and that kind of stuff. Not really familiar with the metal puzzles but I definitely want to get into them. So I guess you could say I'm a beginner with some valuable background experience. Let me tell you, I have had to go back and fix a couple crucial parts a few times now. It's not like I'm not looking at the instructions because I'm trying very hard to understand which part goes where. But it is kind of hard to tell I'm somebody's pictures. Also be an experience thing I'm sure it takes a little bit of hold there. But I am almost done now, and I think I'm on the right track now. Hopefully I won't have to go back and re-adjust anything else. But i really liked the change from my usual wooden builds. Even though im a newbie at this metal puzzle business, i do have one no-pro suggestion: use an electric screwdriver. Made my life SO much easier
S**S
Tolles Geschenk für einen Jungen. Fördert Konzentration und ist zu dem sehr praktisch als Stifte- und Handyhalter
Trustpilot
5 days ago
4 days ago