For most kids who don’t grow up in rural parts of the world, their first experience of farm life is on a decidedly small scale: toys.

The wooden barn is a classic. With its foldout design and numerous wood or plastic animals to move around inside the spacious stalls, the toy is a toddler’s dream—and in many ways, it’s archaic. As most adults know, today’s farm animals don’t live the idyllic life of children’s toys. Which is why the U.K.’s Compassion in World Farming reimagined the classic kids’ toy, but with a dark twist.

“This innovative, one-of-a-kind farm toy evokes feelings of childhood innocence,” Jonty Whittleton, senior campaign manager for the animal rights group, said in a press release. “However, a stark truth lurks behind the shed doors.”

There’s still the same amount of space inside the barn, but the animals are stacked in tighter, with little space to move, and plenty of antibiotics for little boys and girls to dose them up with to keep the toy livestock fat and, um, healthy. You can even plant your blocks of soybeans across the carpet—a stand-in for a country such as Brazil, which supplies industrial livestock farms around the world—to grow food for the animals, which freely yield their milk, bacon, and eggs in the form of little wooden boards that slide out of them.

While it may not be a scale model of a confined animal feeding operation, Compassion in World Farming points out that some 50 billion animals are raised in industrial-style farms every year to meet our global hunger for cheap meat.