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How char-cute!

Fisher-Price is helping preschoolers step up their dinner party game with its new charcuterie board playset, Snacks for Two.

The 17-piece pretend nosh kit, available on Amazon from $14, includes fake cheese, grapes, salami and crackers; fabric napkins printed with cutesy mottos (“Let it brie,” “You’re grape”); faux-marble plates, a wood-accented cutting board and a tiny toy knife.

Besides practicing their itty-bitty entertaining skills, sophisticated kiddos can pull the grapes off the stem, squish the soft cheese and slice the salami with the toy knife.

But the age-3-and-up toy — and its advertisement, which features a fedora-festooned tot serving salami to a beret-wearing pal — is sparking controversy online, with detractors slamming it as “snooty.”

“This is the most bougie toy I’ve ever seen,” writes one disturbed Twitter user.

“What the heck is happening to kids’ toys?” writes another.

But the cheesy set has its defenders, too.

“Really not sure why this charcuterie board toy is getting so much flack,” tweets Louisville, Kentucky, columnist Maggie Menderski. “Making a good cheese tray is an excellent social/hosting skill.”

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