Arcade games for kids
Every game in our Arcade collection is kid-friendly and runs entirely in the browser.
2-Player Dino Run
60 Second Burger Run
60 Second Santa Run
Animal Raceway
Big Block Blast
Blast Red!
Blast the Mooks
Blastify 2
Blasting Marbles
Block Blast
Block Rush
Block Shooter Frenzy
Bloons Pop 3
Bomb Runner
Bubble Pop Adventures
Bubble Shooter Remastered
Building Rush
Building Rush 2
Bull Blast
Bunny Run
Candy Jump
Christmas Pop
Colorush
Colour Rush
Crossclimb by LinkedIn
Dash Dash
Defly.io
Diggy: Gold Rush
Domino Dash
Draw to Smash
Gift Rush
Gift Rush 2
Gift Rush 3
Golf Dash
Golf is a Blast
Hamster Pop
About Arcade games on ToyPlayHub
Arcade games are some of the most-played titles in the kids' browser games world, and for good reason. They are quick to learn, friendly to short attention spans, and almost always work on whatever device your family happens to have nearby — a Chromebook in the kitchen, a tablet in the back seat, a school laptop on a substitute-teacher day. The 102 games in this collection were selected because they meet the ToyPlayHub bar: kid-appropriate content, no signup wall, no installs, and a clear, working link to the publisher's site.
If your child is just getting started with arcade games, we suggest skimming the first page and choosing a title with a name that sparks their curiosity. The genre is broad on purpose — what counts as a great arcade game for a four-year-old is very different from what counts for a ten-year-old. Use the age group filter to narrow things down by years, the subject filter for an academic angle, or browse by the learning skill a game emphasizes. For longer-form practice that pairs nicely with these games, families often turn to one of our recommended learning libraries.
Parents and teachers often ask whether arcade games are "educational." We think the honest answer is yes, but in the way play has always been educational: by giving children a low-stakes space to try things, fail safely, and try again. The games here are first and foremost fun. The learning, when it happens, is a happy side effect — and you can multiply it by adding a quiet reflection at the end of a session: "what was tricky?", "what would you try next time?" A printable workbook from one of our favorite offline practice publishers is another easy way to extend the learning beyond the screen.