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236+ parent-perspective articles covering tutorials, tool reviews, safety checklists, and school-collaboration tips. Filter by age and type to find what your child needs today.
Updated April 2026 | Reviewed by KidsAiTools Team

When parents ask me whether 3D building games are "educational," I usually answer with a question back: what do you mean by educational? If educational means "teaches multiplication tables" or "drills

The safest game for a young kid isn't the one where you've turned off chat in the settings. It's the one where chat doesn't exist in the first place. This distinction matters more than most parents re

If you tried to download LEGO Digital Designer for your kid recently and ended up on a dead link, you're not the only one. LDD was quietly discontinued on January 31, 2022, with LEGO pushing users tow

I want to warn you about a specific scam before I start the list. Most "free" kids' building games in 2026 are free the same way a slot machine is free: you can enter without paying, and then every th

If you followed LEGO's trail of breadcrumbs after LEGO Digital Designer was shut down in 2022, you eventually arrived at BrickLink Studio. Maybe you downloaded it hoping it was a direct replacement. M

Machine Learning for Kids (mlforkids.org) is a free, Scratch-based platform built by IBM engineer Dale Lane that lets children aged 8-14 train real machine learning models and use them inside their...

Google Teachable Machine (teachablemachine.withgoogle.com) is a free web app built by Google Creative Lab that lets anyone — including a 7-year-old — train an image, sound, or pose classifier in a...

Three platforms dominate the "let kids train their own AI" category in 2026, and they're all free. Cognimates came first, out of MIT Media Lab, and introduced the idea that children should teach AI...

Your seven-year-old asked ChatGPT why dinosaurs are extinct. Your twelve-year-old uses an AI image generator to make trading cards of their friends. Your fifteen-year-old quietly runs their history...

Cognimates is an open-source platform from MIT Media Lab that lets kids aged 7-14 train their own AI models, program smart devices, and build games using Scratch-style block coding. It was groundbr...

LEGO shaped roughly two generations of builders with a single, elegant idea: give kids a finite set of parts and watch them create an infinite variety of things. It was a toy that doubled as a creativ

This is the question I've had to answer from other parents more times than I can count, and the usual answer — "physical is better, obviously" — turns out to be wrong in ways that matter. Physical LEG
We organize by four types: Tutorials (step-by-step AI projects with your child), Guides (parent decision-making, e.g. "Is ChatGPT safe for an 8-year-old?"), Reviews (parent-perspective single-tool or comparison reviews), and News (AI education policy, new tool launches). Use the filter tabs above to narrow down.
The KidsAiTools editorial team writes from a parent perspective — we use the AI tools we cover as parents, document what we observe, and publish our notes. We do not currently maintain a child-test panel or named expert reviewers; if we add either, we will disclose names, credentials, and review methodology on the methodology page.
Use the age-group filter above (6-8, 9-12). Every article lists the age bands it applies to. If you have multiple children, start with our parent guides first, then read tutorials aimed at the youngest age in your household.
Three starter picks: "Kids AI Explained: What It Is" for the basics, "30 Safe ChatGPT Prompts for Kids by Age" for something you can use today, and "Khanmigo Review 2026" if you're evaluating paid tools. Any one of them gives you enough to start your first family AI session.
We publish 3-5 new articles a week on average. Published reviews are re-verified quarterly because AI tools change fast. The published-on and updated-on dates on every article page are accurate and correctly signaled to search engines.
No. Reviews are based only on parent hands-on testing. We don't accept paid placements or free licenses from tool vendors. If a tool has a real problem, we write it plainly — no softened language.