Fun learning games for 6 year olds

First graders are cracking two codes at once: reading (blending sounds into words) and numbers (adding within 20, tens and ones). The games below cover both, plus the science of noticing — light, sound, what living things need.

Alphabet Arcade gameplayAlphabet ArcadeEnglish · Ages 4-6

A letter keeps its identity when it is uppercase or lowercase, and its sound helps us recognize words that begin with it.

Counting Critters gameplayCounting CrittersEarly Mathematics · Ages 4-6

Counting tells how many: give each thing exactly one number, and the last number counted is the total.

Number Friends gameplayNumber FriendsEarly Mathematics · Ages 4-6

Each numeral stands for an amount: the numeral 3 means three things.

Pattern Party gameplayPattern PartyEarly Mathematics · Ages 4-6

A pattern repeats; once you spot the repeat, it tells you what comes next.

Plant PartsScience · Ages 4-9

Each plant part has a distinct job, and roots, stems, leaves, flowers, and seeds work with sunlight, water, and air to help the whole plant live, grow, and begin a new generation.

Rhyme Time gameplayRhyme TimeEnglish · Ages 4-8

Rhyming words can begin differently, but their ending sounds match; listening to the end of each word reveals its rhyme family.

Shape Sorter gameplayShape SorterEarly geometry · Ages 4-6

Shapes have names and can be told apart by being round or by their number and length of sides, even when their size, colour, or direction changes.

Sound BlenderEnglish · Ages 4-8

A spoken word appears when every letter-sound or sound chunk is blended smoothly from left to right; the same ordered sounds can be segmented to build the written word.

Story ListenEnglish · Ages 4-9

Listening comprehension means holding spoken story clues in mind, connecting their order and meaning, and using them to answer without seeing the passage.

Trace & RaceEnglish · Ages 4-7

Clear handwriting grows from starting each stroke in the right place, moving in a steady direction, and following the strokes in order.

Weather WatchScience · Ages 4-9

Weather clues such as clouds, temperature, wind, and repeating observations help us describe current conditions, prepare sensibly, and make simple forecasts that are predictions rather than promises.

Which Has More? gameplayWhich Has More?Early Mathematics · Ages 4-6

One group can have more, fewer, or the same number of things, and counting tells which for sure.

Apple Add gameplayApple AddMathematics · Ages 5-7

Adding means putting groups together and counting every object in the new whole group.

Clock QuestMathematics · Ages 5-10

The short hand shows the hour and the long hand counts minutes around the clock; reading or setting both hands together makes one exact time.

Dino DigScience · Ages 5-10

Palaeontologists identify dinosaurs by comparing combinations of fossil features—such as skulls, horns, plates, claws, limb proportions, and tails—rather than guessing from one bone.

Doodle Lab gameplayDoodle LabArt & Design · Ages 5-13

A rough sketch carries an idea; describing what it should become brings it to life.

Life Cycle LabScience · Ages 5-10

A living thing passes through stages in a particular order, and reproduction links the adult stage to a new generation so the pattern repeats as a life cycle.

Shape SpaceMathematics · Ages 5-10

A shape keeps its identity when it turns, changes size, or appears as an everyday object; its straight sides and corners identify a 2D shape, while faces, edges, vertices, and curved surfaces identify a 3D solid.

Skip Count Safari gameplaySkip Count SafariMathematics · Ages 5-9

Skip-counting makes equal jumps on the number line; each landing adds the same amount, so the number of jumps connects directly to multiplication.

Story Quest gameplayStory QuestEnglish · Ages 5-11

Reading a story means picturing it, remembering it, and working out what it means.

Time Traveler's SuitcaseHistory · Ages 5-10

Objects are historical evidence: their materials, technology, and use help us place them in broad eras from the Stone Age to today.

Word Zap gameplayWord ZapEnglish · Ages 5-9

High-frequency words become quick to read when we recognise the whole written word, connect it to its spoken form, and practise it again after a useful gap.

Capital Quest gameplayCapital QuestEnglish · Ages 6-10

Capital letters signal the beginning of a sentence and the special names of people, places, days, months, and titles; ordinary words stay lowercase.

Chart ChampsMathematics · Ages 6-11

Picture marks and bar heights encode data values; matching the named category to its mark and reading the scale lets us compare, calculate, and rebuild the data accurately.

Clock Workshop gameplayClock WorkshopMaths · Ages 6-11

A clock’s short hand points to the hour and its long hand points to the minutes; reading both hands together tells the time.

Contraction Station gameplayContraction StationEnglish · Ages 6-10

A contraction joins words into a shorter form; the apostrophe stands where one or more letters were removed, while the meaning stays the same.

Dig Site DetectiveHistory · Ages 6-11

Archaeologists use an artifact's material, symbols, shape, and purpose as evidence to connect it to the people and time that made it.

Gator Chomp gameplayGator ChompMathematics · Ages 6-10

The symbols > and < open toward the greater value, while = shows equal values; comparing place values lets us use the same relationship for whole numbers, decimals, fractions, and ordered sets.

Money Market gameplayMoney MarketMathematics · Ages 6-10

Money amounts are totals of coin and note values; exact payment matches a price, while change is the difference between what was paid and what it cost.

Note NestArt · Ages 6-12

On a treble-clef staff, each higher line or space moves to the next letter name, while the note head tells how many beats the pitch lasts.

Number Ladder gameplayNumber LadderMaths · Ages 6-11

Adding combines every member of two or more groups into one total; the groups change arrangement, but no members disappear.

Number Line Jumper gameplayNumber Line JumperMathematics · Ages 6-11

A number line puts values in order at equal intervals: direction shows increase or decrease, while the scale tells what each hop is worth across whole numbers, negatives, fractions, and decimals.

Place Value Towers gameplayPlace Value TowersMathematics · Ages 6-10

A digit's position determines its value; ten units in one place can be regrouped as one unit in the place to its left without changing the number.

Punctuation Planet gameplayPunctuation PlanetEnglish · Ages 6-11

Punctuation is part of a sentence's meaning: end marks show its intent, commas separate items, and apostrophes show missing letters or ownership.

Shape Factory gameplayShape FactoryMathematics · Ages 6-11

A shape is identified by its structure: 2D shapes have sides and vertices, while 3D solids have faces, edges, and vertices; a valid net folds so its faces meet exactly once.

Spell Caster gameplaySpell CasterEnglish · Ages 6-11

Spelling turns the sounds in a spoken word into letters or letter teams in the same order, then blends those parts back into the whole word.

Spelling BeeEnglish · Ages 6-11

Accurate spelling means holding a spoken word in mind and placing every sound, letter team, quiet letter, and remembered tricky part in the right order.

Times Table ArenaMathematics · Ages 6-11

A multiplication fact counts equal groups: a × b is a equal rows with b in each row, and the product is the total across every row.

Getting the most out of learning games at this age

  • Let them pick the subject — a kid who chose the game fights for it.
  • Short and often beats long and rare: 10-15 minutes with a real finish line.
  • Ask 'show me how it works' afterwards — teaching you is the best retention test there is.

Common questions

What learning skills should 6 year olds learn?

First graders are cracking two codes at once: reading (blending sounds into words) and numbers (adding within 20, tens and ones). The games below cover both, plus the science of noticing — light, sound, what living things need.

Are these games free?

Every Ako lesson here runs in the browser, and your first one is completely free — no account, no card. A subscription unlocks the full catalog of 100+ lessons.

How are Ako lessons different from other learning games?

Ako — a voice AI tutor — is inside every game. He sees what your child does, asks for predictions before they act, and adapts his coaching to their age. Parents get a weekly note about what actually clicked.