Skip to main content

Digital Trends may earn a commission when you buy through links on our site. Why trust us?

The best iPhone and iPad games for kids

 

If you’re a parent, you know what happens when you leave your iPhone or iPad alone with your youngsters: You’re lucky to get it back in one piece — or at all. Kids just love iOS devices, and maybe you have an older device that you’ve bequeathed to your young ones, or you allow your kids to borrow yours for a set length of time. If so, there’s so much fun and learning to be had.

Recommended Videos

Apple’s App Store is a cornucopia of entertainment and learning apps for grownups and kids, and we’ve sorted through some kid favorites to bring you a sampling of the best iOS games available today. Note that the definition of “kids” is broad and runs from just past infant to pre-teen, so we’ve categorized our chosen games to adhere to specific age groups up to age 12.

Ages 2 to 5

Dino Tim (Free)

Dino Tim game featuring a cartoon character and numbers for counting.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

If learning basic geometric shapes, colors, and math while saving Dino Tim’s family from witches sounds like fun, this is the game for your kids. Educational puzzles infused with a little bit of magic help them learn while rescuing Dino Tim’s family from the witches’ clutches — and it helps enhance their fine motor skills, too, as well as develop attention and concentration skills.

iOS

Peek-a-Zoo (Free)

Peek-a-Zoo game featuring cute cartoon animal figures.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

If there’s one thing kids love, it’s animals. Peek-A- Zoo lets the wee ones identify different species and their habits, actions, sounds, calls, feelings, and emotions. This simple game helps toddlers connect and empathize with the animal kingdom.

iOS

Toca Nature ($4)

Toca Nature app showing animals and landscape.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

The natural world is Mother Earth in your child’s hands as Toca Nature brings nature and animals to the small screen. The interactive app lets kids see what happens when you plant a tree or view a landscape from a mountaintop, or how to feed and sustain all kinds of creatures. Strolling through different ecosystems brings kids face to face with everyone and everything that co-exists in the world alongside us.

iOS

Busy Shapes ($3)

Busy Shapes game showing different shapes in varied colors.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

It’s never too early to develop hand-eye coordination, and Busy Shapes uses a series of puzzles to help toddlers recognize and handle various shapes and match them with the proper slots — with some helpful encouragement and guidance from the app. Inspired by Swiss psychologist Jean Piaget’s theories of childhood cognitive development, the app seeks to develop experiences paired with logical reasoning. The app’s A.I. features track the time it takes each child to complete a level and adjust the game’s challenge. Busy Shapes lets kids freely access shapes while hiding the menu and even saves your child’s place in a game.

iOS

Ages 6 to 9

Kodable (Free trial/$7 per month)

Kodable game app featuring coding related activities.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

If you want your kids to have fun while learning a valuable skill, download Koadable. It’s free to get started with hundreds of activities that teach them the fundamentals of coding, from object-oriented programming and variables to syntax, classes, and more. They’ll help the Fuzz family navigate the Technomazes of Smeeborg while exploring the slime-infested plains of Bug World and Asteroidia’s asteroid fields, all the while learning to use simple drag-and-drop commands and earning rewards along the way. After the free trial, Kodable starts at $7 per month or $60 per year.

iOS

Math Bingo ($3)

Math Bingo app homepage showing bingo screen with cartoons.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

For many kids, math comes naturally. But for others, it can be a struggle that follows them into adulthood. Math Bingo helps kids orient themselves to addition, subtraction, multiplication, division, and mixed numbers via separate Bingo games with three levels of difficulty. Players get a choice of avatars and profiles, and they get Bingo Bug rewards for getting the answers right.

iOS

Thinkrolls 2 ($5)

Thinkrolls 2 game puzzles featuring cartoons.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

This set of mind-bending puzzles offers 270 levels of gameplay with puzzles appropriate for ages 3 to 9. It helps kids improve logical thinking, spatial cognition, problem-solving, memory, and observation by introducing scientific concepts like physics, gravity, buoyancy, levitation, electricity, density, and acceleration. It features 32 smart characters and tracks six players.  There are no third-party ads or in-app purchases.

iOS

PBS Kids Games (Free)

PBS Kids Game featuring different mini game options.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Look for all your favorite characters on PBS Kids in more than 100 free games that let the little ones relive and enhance the experience of their favorite shows. Games include Daniel Tiger’s Neighborhood, Wild Kratts, Super Why, Arthur, Sesame Street, The Cat in the Hat Knows a Lot About That!, Odd Squad, Dinosaur Train, Let’s Go Luna, Pinkalicious, and more. These games — mazes, puzzles, coloring, and dress-up — encourage learning science, math, reading, and creativity.

iOS

Ages 9 and over

Redshift Sky Pro ($10)

Redshift Sky Pro app showing 3D models of planets and stars.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Wannabe astronauts and astronomy fans will love this out-of-this-world app. At $10, it’s not the cheapest app around, but it offers a rewarding experience for older children — and adults, too. Explore the galaxy with over 100,000 stars and other celestial objects in the planetarium, take off on a space flight to distant galaxies, view 3D models of planets and moons, or plan a stargazing session using the Sky Calendar. In Today’s Night Sky, users can easily see what’s happening in the sky tonight, and there are 25 educational chapters of Discover Astronomy to watch, which should further ignite their passion for constellation-gazing.

iOS

Earth Primer ($10)

Earth Primer app showing the model of the Earth.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

This app is highly educational, informing young and old alike about the inner workings of our planet, but it is only available for iPads. It has gesture-based features and interactive geological simulations that demonstrate how volcanoes are formed or how rain is created. With easy-to-understand language, vivid photography, interactive 3D models, and a sandbox mode, players can gain insight into how our home was formed. The app has 20 tools you can use to play with the Earth’s elements, like creating volcanoes, pushing around tectonic plates, painting with the wind, and more engaging actions.

iOS

Pokémon Go (Free)

Pokemon Go app showing pokemons and teams.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Pokémon has enthralled players with this entertaining and active game that will be a hit for the whole family. Pokémon Go forces you to venture into the outside world to discover the great unknowns your local surroundings have to offer. If you’re stuck inside, you can still play the game and participate in battles. This game lets you catch additional Pokémon to add to your Pokédex, compete in gym competitions, team up with trainers for raid battles, and more. You get the option to use Apple’s Health app to earn walking distance, even if the app is closed.

iOS

Solar Walk ($5)

Solar Walk app showing the solar system.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

With Solar Walk, you’re able to explore the solar system right from your device. The app lets you take virtual flights between space objects, observe a real-time 3D model of the solar system, and explore planets, moons, satellites, asteroids, dwarf planets, comets, stars, and celestial bodies. This app acts as a veritable time machine, allowing you to visit the future and the past while also exploring the Milky Way and other cosmic phenomena.

iOS

Jackie Dove
Contributor
Jackie is an obsessive, insomniac tech writer and editor in northern California. A wildlife advocate, cat fan, and photo app…
Apple hopes foldable and thinner iPhones will boost sales
A render of the iPhone Air.

Apple's iPhone sales have declined in recent years, primarily because the company has focused more on software updates than hardware improvements. However, Apple hopes this trend will change next year, as it plans to introduce new handsets with significant design upgrades.

There has been considerable discussion recently about the upcoming "iPhone 17 Air," which is anticipated to be the thinnest iPhone ever made. It is expected to be released in September alongside the rest of the iPhone 17 lineup.

Read more
Apple’s plans for a giant foldable iPad sound ridiculously exciting
The Asus Zenbook Fold 17 with the Galaxy Z Fold 4 and Galaxy Fold.

Apple is the biggest consumer electronics player that is yet to dabble in foldable devices. It seems the company’s plans for a foldable device could actually be more ambitious than any rival has attempted so far. According to Bloomberg, the company’s next big product category could be, well, a big foldable iPad.

The report mentions “a giant iPad that unfolds into the size of two iPad Pros side-by-side.” The biggest challenge for Apple has been eliminating the crease in the middle of the flexible screen, and it seems the company’s engineers have solved that piece of the puzzle to a large extent.

Read more
Some iPhone users report overheating when using Apple Intelligence
The Nomad Magnetic Leather Back on the iPhone 16 Pro Max

After a long wait, iOS 18.2 has finally rolled out to the public at large and unlocked more Apple Intelligence features like Image Playground, Genmoji, and an upgraded Mail app. It might have also introduced a way to keep your hands warm on these frosty winter days, according to some users.

Reddit user u/dsdxp posted on the iPhone subreddit that they had unlocked a secret feature in the iPhone 16 Pro. The comment was obviously sardonic, but many other users responded with their own stories of troubling temperatures from their iPhones. The common element between all of the stories was the Image Playground app and the excessive heat it creates while in use.

Read more