Games for Ages 7 to 9
Hand-grouped for ages 7–9 based on reading level, motor skill, and the kind of thinking kids enjoy at this stage.
Pick a subject for Ages 7–9
Math
Number sense, arithmetic, fractions, and logic — built into play.
Reading & Spelling
Letters, phonics, vocabulary, and word puzzles for growing readers.
Science
Animals, planets, weather, and physics — curiosity by the screenful.
Typing
Keyboard fluency and home-row practice for elementary students.
Logic & Puzzles
Brain teasers, sequencing, and step-by-step problem-solving.
Memory
Matching, recall, and concentration games that grow working memory.
Creative Arts
Drawing, music, color, and design tools that celebrate imagination.
All Ages 7–9 games
100 Doors Puzzle Box
2-Player Dino Run
2048 Cards
2048: Fibonacci
2048 Sorting Puzzle
2048
4 Pictures 1 Word
60 Second Burger Run
60 Second Santa Run
8 Ball Pool
9 Ball Pool
Animal Raceway
Animation Puzzle
Arcade Golf Neon
Arithmetic Game
Atomic Puzzle 2
B-Cubed
Bad Soccer Manager
Ball Surfer 3D
Basketball Master 2
Beach Soccer
Beastie Blocks
Beaver Blocks
Big Block Blast
Big Blocks Battle
Billiards
Blast Red!
Blast the Mooks
Blastify 2
Blasting Marbles
Block Blast
Block Rush
Block Shooter Frenzy
Blocks
Blocks 2
Bloons Pop 3
Why an age group, not an exact age?
Children grow at very different rates, especially in the early elementary years. A "Grade 2" reading level can mean wildly different things for two kids who were born a month apart. Instead of pretending to know exactly which game suits a six-year-old versus a seven-year-old, we group games into three broad bands — Ages 4 to 6, Ages 7 to 9, Ages 10 to 12 — and trust parents and teachers to pick within each band based on what they know about the child in front of them.
Within the Ages 7 to 9 band, you'll find games that vary from very simple cause-and-effect taps to more involved problem-solving sequences. If a particular game feels too easy or too hard, hop sideways into one of the neighboring age bands or sort by a specific academic subject or learning skill instead. Many families also keep one of our recommended age-tuned learning libraries open in a second tab for offline reinforcement.
If you are a teacher building a list for a substitute day or an indoor recess, this page is a great starting point. Open the subject or skill links on each game to discover similar titles, and feel free to bookmark the URL — it stays stable as we add more games over time.