Comprehensive AI education guidance for parents and children, making learning safer and more effective
The secret to great AI art? Be weird. The weirder your prompt, the funnier the result. "Draw a cat" is boring. "Draw a cat wearing sunglasses riding a skateboard through a volcano" is amazing.
"Free educational game" in 2026 usually means one of three things: free for 5 minutes then a paywall, free with an ad every 30 seconds, or free and so boring your kid quits in two minutes. This list i
You're bored. You've scrolled through everything. YouTube is showing you stuff you've already seen. Here are 10 games you can play RIGHT NOW — no download, no app store, no waiting. Just click and pla
Some kids don't do well with Minecraft. Not because they're "not ready" or "not a gamer" — because the night cycle stresses them out, the sudden zombie groan makes them flinch, and the awareness that
Not every good gift comes in a box. Some of the best gifts for kids in 2026 are free, digital, and available instantly — no shipping, no wrapping, no "assembly required." Browser-based building games

Six is a pivotal age for building games. A 5-year-old mostly wants to touch things and see them stack. A 7-year-old can start following written instructions and has the patience for multi-step project

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

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

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...

Four is a weird age for "games." Your kid can use an iPad competently, understands cause and effect, and will build towers out of anything they can stack — but they can't read, they can't navigate men

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...

Five-year-olds occupy a weird developmental in-between. They're not toddlers — they can recognize letters, follow two-step instructions, and stay focused on a build for 10-15 minutes. But they're also