For families & caregivers
Parents
Kids don’t need more screen time — they need better screen time. Learning Samurai offers calm, one-page games you can say “yes” to.
Open one page
No child logins or pop-ups.
Practice for 5–10 min
Reading, words, math, geography.
Hear & see feedback
Audio prompts, instant checks.
Stop cleanly
Clear end — no endless scroll.
See progress
Optional simple summaries.
Any device
Phone, iPad, Chromebook.
Students can suggest topics anytime via the Request a Game form.
How families use it
On the go
Car line, waiting rooms, before practice — one calm page for quick practice.
With siblings
Short turns keep focus and reduce fights over devices.
Wind-down time
No infinite feeds; a clear end helps with routines.
How it works (5 steps)
- 1) Pick
Choose a game/topic for today’s 5–10 min. - 2) Play
One calm page with audio prompts & instant checks. - 3) Pause/Stop
Clear end; easy to stop and switch tasks. - 4) Review
Optional summary: accuracy, attempts, time. - 5) Repeat
Build a simple routine a few days a week.
Have a request from your school or child’s teacher? We can tune games to local lists and units.
Idea prompts
Reading & words
- Sight word lists for your grade
- Science/social studies vocabulary
- Interactive story ideas
Math
- Facts, word problems, math facts races
- Money, time, measurement mini games
- Charts/data to explore together
Geography & languages
- States & capitals
- Bilingual word practice
- Local history/culture topics
Safety & privacy
No child logins
Kids play on a single calm page. No accounts needed.
Minimal data
We track practice summaries only (accuracy, attempts, time).
Family control
Parents can request deletion. See our Privacy & Data.
FAQ
Do kids need accounts?
No. Everything runs in the browser on one page. No child logins.
How long should a session be?
We design for 5–10 minute blocks to encourage focus and easy stopping points.
Can I see my child’s progress?
Yes — optional summaries show accuracy, attempts, and time on task.
How do I suggest a new topic?
Use the Request a Game form. Students can submit ideas too (with an adult).
