Fun math games for 4 year olds
6th grade opens middle school math: ratios and rates, negative numbers, early expressions and equations, and statistics. Abstraction arrives fast — games that keep a visual model under the symbols (balance scales for equations, double number lines for ratios) smooth the jump.
Counting CrittersEarly Mathematics · Ages 4-6Counting tells how many: give each thing exactly one number, and the last number counted is the total.
Number FriendsEarly Mathematics · Ages 4-6Each numeral stands for an amount: the numeral 3 means three things.
Pattern PartyEarly Mathematics · Ages 4-6A pattern repeats; once you spot the repeat, it tells you what comes next.
Shape SorterEarly geometry · Ages 4-6Shapes have names and can be told apart by being round or by their number and length of sides, even when their size, colour, or direction changes.
Which Has More?Early Mathematics · Ages 4-6One group can have more, fewer, or the same number of things, and counting tells which for sure.
Getting the most out of math games at this age
- Ten focused minutes beats forty distracted ones — stop while it's still fun.
- Ask 'how did you know?' after a right answer, not just a wrong one. The explanation is where the math lives.
- If a game frustrates, drop down a year without comment. Confidence compounds faster than difficulty.
Common questions
What math skills should 4 year olds learn?
6th grade opens middle school math: ratios and rates, negative numbers, early expressions and equations, and statistics. Abstraction arrives fast — games that keep a visual model under the symbols (balance scales for equations, double number lines for ratios) smooth the jump.
Are these games free?
Every Ako lesson here runs in the browser, and your first one is completely free — no account, no card. A subscription unlocks the full catalog of 100+ lessons.
How are Ako lessons different from other learning games?
Ako — a voice AI tutor — is inside every game. He sees what your child does, asks for predictions before they act, and adapts his coaching to their age. Parents get a weekly note about what actually clicked.