How AI is Transforming Learning for Kids in 2026
A parent-friendly guide to AI tutors, adaptive curricula, real-time feedback, and what families should watch as AI reshapes children's learning.
Read articleResearch-aware, parent-friendly articles on PlayPuzzle Study, kids puzzle games, memory, screen time, and the kind of digital play that helps children think, persist, and grow.
All currently published PlayPuzzle blog posts, ordered from newest to oldest.
A parent-friendly guide to AI tutors, adaptive curricula, real-time feedback, and what families should watch as AI reshapes children's learning.
Read articleA detailed parent and educator guide to Number Ninja Dash, PlayPuzzle's new fast-paced math runner game for ages 5-12, and how lane-switching calculations build math reflexes.
Read articleA parent-friendly look at Fruit Drop, PlayPuzzle's free physics merge game where players drop fruits, merge matching pairs, and chase the watermelon.
Read articleA comprehensive parent and educator guide to PlayPuzzle Study, including interactive quizzes, online abacus practice, AI-powered educational activities, mobile learning, and the future roadmap.
Read articleA detailed parent and educator guide to PlayPuzzle's new sequencing game for ages 5-8, and how ordering everyday activity cards builds logic, cause-and-effect reasoning, working memory, and confidence.
Read articleThe "screen time is bad" story is incomplete. This guide explains how to tell the difference between passive digital stimulation and active, effortful play that supports children's developing brains.
Read articleA look at why simple matching games fit the preschool brain so well, from working memory and attention to hippocampal development and playful challenge.
Read articleWhat the PlayPuzzle editorial library is built around.
How attention, working memory, emotional regulation, and problem-solving grow through age-appropriate play.
Why interactive, goal-directed games are different from passive video and endless-feed content.
Practical ways memory games, jigsaws, word games, and number activities support real cognitive skills.