Your brain is already amazing. Let's make it even better.

A gym for your brain

Memory isn't something you're stuck with — it's a muscle you can train. Every game here is built around real science, but it feels like play. No tests, no grades, no pressure. Just you vs. your best score.

Two kinds of memory you train

Different games, different skills — here's what each one does.

Working Memory

Your brain's sticky note. It holds a phone number for a few seconds, follows directions step-by-step, or repeats a pattern someone just showed you. The bigger it gets, the easier math, reading, and problem-solving feel.

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Long-Term Memory

Your personal library. It stores names, capitals, stories, and skills forever. The trick isn't just stuffing things in — it's building strong connections so you can find them later.

Meet the six challenges

Every game targets a specific memory skill. Here's what makes each one tick.

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Picture Pairs

Visual Long-Term Memory

Every time you flip a card, your brain snaps a photo of where it is. You start remembering shapes, colors, and positions without even trying. It's the same skill that helps you recognize faces and find your stuff in a messy room.

Pro tip: Don't just guess — try to remember the exact spot. Your brain loves location clues!
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Color Echo

Working Memory + Focus

This one is pure brain push-ups. You watch, you listen, you repeat — and the sequence keeps growing. Scientists call this the 'digit span' test, and it's one of the best ways to make your working memory stronger.

Pro tip: Say the colors out loud in your head. Your voice helps your brain hold on longer.
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Number Flash

Working Memory + Concentration

A number blinks on screen, then disappears. Can you hold it in your mind and type it back? As you get better, the numbers get longer. This is exactly how working memory training works in real labs.

Pro tip: Break long numbers into chunks. 1492 becomes '14' and '92' — way easier!
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🛒

Grocery List

Sequential Working Memory

Real life is full of lists: what to pack, what to buy, what to do first. This game makes you memorize items in the exact order — then pick them back in that order from a jumbled pile.

Pro tip: Turn the list into a silly story. 'A banana wearing a hat bought milk' sticks way better than a plain list.
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🗺️

World Places

Associative Long-Term Memory

Your brain is amazing at linking things together. France → Paris, Japan → Tokyo. The more connections you build, the faster you learn new subjects in school — from history to science to languages.

Pro tip: Picture the flag doing something related to the capital. The Eiffel Tower on the French flag? You won't forget it.
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🙂

Face & Name

Social + Associative Memory

Remembering names is a real-life superpower. This game trains you to connect a face with a name by creating a quick mental snapshot. Use it at school, camp, or parties.

Pro tip: Look for something unique about the face — freckles, glasses, a big smile — and link it to the name.
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Does this actually work?

Yes — and not just for memory. Studies show that training working memory improves focus, reading comprehension, and even math skills. Think of it like running: the more you do it, the farther you can go. Five minutes a day is plenty to see real change.

Science-backedNo sign-upTotally freeFun first

Short & Sweet

Each game takes 3–5 minutes. No marathon sessions needed.

Gets Harder Smartly

Levels rise only when you're ready. The challenge grows with you.

Real Skills

Every exercise maps to something you actually use in school and life.

Track Your Best

Your top scores stick around. Try to beat your own record.