Browse games by learning subject

Seven academic angles families and teachers actually search for. Pick a subject and dive into hundreds of free games.

Why "subjects" instead of just "categories"?

When parents and teachers go looking for a game for a kid, they almost never start with "casual" or "arcade." They start with what they're trying to help with — "I want a math game for a second-grader," or "do you have any typing games my third-graders can use during indoor recess?" That's why ToyPlayHub puts academic subjects at the front of the navigation. Genres like puzzle and arcade still exist on the site, but the seven subjects above are the way most adults naturally narrow things down.

Each subject collects games drawn from across our genre library. A "math" subject page, for example, includes everything from a kindergarten-friendly counting tap game to a tween-level fraction puzzler. Our internal classifier looks at the game's genre tag, its associated learning skill, and keywords in its title and description to decide which subject it best belongs to. A handful of games legitimately straddle two subjects — a typing game that also drills sight words, for instance — and we lean toward the subject that best matches what an adult searcher would expect.

What each subject covers

  • Math — counting, place value, arithmetic, fractions, time and money, geometry, and the dozens of "math facts" practice loops kids encounter through elementary school.
  • Reading & Spelling — alphabet recognition, phonics, sight words, vocabulary, spelling drills, word puzzles, and short comprehension games.
  • Science — animals, plants, weather, space, simple physics, and "how the world works" simulations that give kids a low-stakes way to explore.
  • Typing — home-row practice, basic keyboarding speed, and short story-style typing games.
  • Logic & Puzzles — sequencing, sorting, pattern matching, sliding puzzles, sudoku-style grids, and brain-teaser physics games.
  • Memory — matching, concentration, "what changed" games, and short-term recall challenges.
  • Creative Arts — drawing, coloring, music-making, design, and other open-ended toys that put creativity first.

Want more focused practice?

Each subject page includes deep links to age-band combinations — for example, math for ages 7–9 or reading and spelling for ages 4–6. Those combo pages are where teachers tend to live; they give you the right age and the right subject in a single bookmarkable URL. Pair them with our recommended workbook providers when you want offline practice that mirrors what your child is doing on screen.