APP COMRADE

Samsung Galaxy / Education / ABC VEGETABLES ALPHABET - NAME COLOURING GAMES

REVIEW

ABC Vegetables Alphabet teaches the produce aisle one crayon at a time.

A pre-school colouring-and-vocabulary app that pairs each letter with a vegetable. The premise is narrow, the execution is fine, and a toddler will not care that the art is generic.

BY THE APP COMRADE DESK · MAY 10, 2026 · 4 MIN READ

Samsung Galaxy

ABC Vegetables Alphabet - Name Colouring Games

LEARNING APPS

OUR SCORE

6.4

SAMSUNG GALAXY

★ 5.0

PRICE

Free

In-app purchases

Pre-school apps live or die on whether a two-year-old can use them without a parent hovering, and ABC Vegetables Alphabet — Name Colouring Games clears that bar without trying for much else. It is a colouring book with a vocabulary list bolted on, and on a Galaxy tablet that is enough to fill a quiet half-hour.

The Learning Apps, the studio behind it, ships a small portfolio of single-theme toddler apps on the Galaxy Store — animal sounds, baby piano, this one. The pattern is consistent: a narrow educational hook, large tap targets, free with ads, a few dollars to clear them. ABC Vegetables sits comfortably inside that pattern and does not pretend to be more than the next half-hour of screen time on a rainy afternoon.

What you are buying — or rather, downloading for free and tolerating the ads of — is twenty-six letters, twenty-six vegetables, and a paint-by-tap canvas that a small child can drive without help. That is a complete idea, narrowly scoped. The criticism that follows is not that the app fails at it, but that twenty-six vegetables is a shorter loop than a curious three-year-old will tolerate for long.

It is a colouring book with a vocabulary list bolted on, and on a Galaxy tablet that is enough to fill a quiet half-hour.

FEATURES

ABC Vegetables Alphabet pairs each letter of the alphabet with a vegetable — A for asparagus, B for broccoli, and onward — and gives the child two things to do with it. The first is a name screen: a tappable letter, the vegetable's name spelled out, and audio that pronounces both. The second is a colouring screen: a line drawing of the vegetable with a small palette of crayons and a fill-or-paint tool.

The colouring tool is the larger of the two halves. Children pick a colour, tap a region, and the section fills. There is also a freehand brush for kids who would rather scribble than tap-fill, and an eraser that wipes back to the line art without resetting the whole picture. Saved pictures live in a small gallery the parent can review.

Monetisation is the standard Galaxy Store kids-app arrangement — free to install, ads shown between activities, and in-app purchases to unlock a no-ads mode and additional colouring scenes. The app is listed as Education and runs in portrait or landscape on a phone or tablet.

MISSION ACCOMPLISHED

The colouring half holds up better than the alphabet half. Tap-to-fill is the right primary interaction for a two- or three-year-old whose fine motor control is still arriving, and the regions are drawn large enough that mis-taps are rare. The crayon palette is small on purpose — fewer choices, less paralysis — and the undo is one tap deep, which is the only depth a toddler will use.

Audio pronunciation of each vegetable is clear and unhurried, which matters more than parents expect. A lot of pre-school apps rush their voice-over to fit a short clip; this one lets the word land before the next prompt arrives.

ROOM TO IMPROVE

The theme is its own ceiling. Twenty-six vegetables is a thin well to draw from, and once a child has coloured the carrot and the kale a few times the loop runs out. There is no progression, no unlock cadence, no reason a four-year-old would still open this when the three-year-old version of them already learned the alphabet from it.

Ad density is the second issue. Interstitials land between screens often enough that a small child will tap through them by accident, and the rewarded-ad prompts to unlock extra scenes will frustrate parents who would rather just pay once. The in-app purchase to remove ads exists, and most households who keep the app installed past the first week should pay it.

CONCLUSION

Worth a download for parents of a two-to-three-year-old who is in the colouring-and-letters phase and uses a Galaxy tablet as a kid device. Pay the no-ads upgrade on day one if the child takes to it, and graduate to something with broader content — Khan Academy Kids, ABCmouse, or Endless Alphabet — once the vegetable bench is exhausted. As a single-purpose colouring book with an alphabet hook, the app is honest about what it is.