Free daily brain games
No download. No sign-up. Twelve quick games for memory, words, math, attention, coordination, and reaction speed.
Word Sprint
Type as many words correctly as you can in 60 seconds. Tracks WPM and accuracy.
Play now →Word of the Day
One carefully chosen word every day. Complete definition, etymology, and a 3-question quiz.
Play now →Flap!
Classic tap-to-fly browser game. Dodge the pipes. No download required.
Play now →Two Cars
Steer two cars at once. Collect circles, avoid cones, and choose Classic, Zen, or Precision mode.
Play now →Color Match
Click the button matching the ink color, not the word. Classic Stroop attention test.
Play now →Memory Grid
Watch tiles light up in sequence. Reproduce the pattern. Tests working memory.
Play now →Number Memory
Memorize increasingly long digit strings. Classic short-term memory span test.
Play now →Mental Math
Solve arithmetic problems in 60 seconds. Trains calculation speed and focus.
Play now →Symbol Search
Find the one symbol that does not match. Tests visual scanning and attention.
Play now →Find the Way
Generate a maze, plan a route, use hints, and reach the goal before your best time.
Play now →Reaction Test
Click when the screen turns green. 5 rounds. Your average reaction time in milliseconds.
Play now →Why brain games support focus and performance
Short-form cognitive challenges — reaction tests, pattern memory, attention tasks like the Stroop test — give you a quick way to practice a specific mental skill and notice how your performance changes from day to day. They are best understood as focused warm-ups and benchmarks, not magic shortcuts to broad intelligence gains.
The key word is "brief." Unlike the dubious claims of dedicated "brain training" apps that promise broad cognitive enhancement from hours of play, the real benefit of short daily challenges is much simpler: they keep your cognitive systems warmed up and engaged. Think of them as a mental warm-up, not a workout — the equivalent of a few minutes of stretching before a long run. Done daily as a break between Pomodoro sessions, they serve as active recovery rather than passive scrolling.
Learn more in our article: Do brain games actually improve focus?