Fun science games for 6 year olds
1st grade science is structured noticing: light and sound, what plants and animals need, patterns in the sky. The skill being built isn't facts — it's observing, describing, and asking testable questions.
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.
Weather WatchScience · Ages 4-9Weather 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.
Dino DigScience · Ages 5-10Palaeontologists identify dinosaurs by comparing combinations of fossil features—such as skulls, horns, plates, claws, limb proportions, and tails—rather than guessing from one bone.
Life Cycle LabScience · Ages 5-10A 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.
Getting the most out of science games at this age
- Always get the prediction first — 'what do you think will happen?' turns play into an experiment.
- Wrong predictions are the good ones. Celebrate the surprise, then ask what changed their mind.
- Connect the game to the kitchen: melting butter is states of matter, a bath drain is a force, dinner is a food chain.
Common questions
What science skills should 6 year olds learn?
1st grade science is structured noticing: light and sound, what plants and animals need, patterns in the sky. The skill being built isn't facts — it's observing, describing, and asking testable questions.
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.