Fun science games for year 5
4th grade is energy year: how energy transfers, waves, circuits and electricity, plus earth's changing surface and how animals process information. Circuits especially reward simulation — kids can safely short things that would pop a real fuse.
Each plant part has a distinct job, and roots, stems, leaves, flowers, and seeds work with sunlight, water, and air to help the whole plant live, grow, and begin a new generation.
Weather WatchScience · Ages 4-9Weather clues such as clouds, temperature, wind, and repeating observations help us describe current conditions, prepare sensibly, and make simple forecasts that are predictions rather than promises.
Dino DigScience · Ages 5-10Palaeontologists identify dinosaurs by comparing combinations of fossil features—such as skulls, horns, plates, claws, limb proportions, and tails—rather than guessing from one bone.
Life Cycle LabScience · Ages 5-10A living thing passes through stages in a particular order, and reproduction links the adult stage to a new generation so the pattern repeats as a life cycle.
Biome ExplorerScience · Ages 7-13A biome's long-term temperature and rainfall shape its vegetation, which determines which plants, animals, and food chains can survive there.
Ocean DeepLife and Earth Science · Ages 7-12The ocean changes in zones with depth: sunlight fades, temperature falls, and pressure rises, so animals need different adaptations to live at different depths.
Sky HighEarth and Space Science · Ages 7-12As altitude increases, Earth’s air gets gradually thinner: birds and airplanes need enough air, balloons rise into thin air, and satellites orbit above almost all of it.
Star MapperScience · Ages 7-13Constellations are recognizable patterns we see from Earth: their stars are real, but the connecting lines are imaginary guides, and hemisphere and season change which patterns are easiest to find.
Circuit RescuePhysics · Ages 8-11Electric current flows only around one complete, unbroken loop; a switch controls that loop but is not the same as a broken wire, and every component in a series circuit shares the same route.
Forces Tug of WarPhysics · Ages 8-11Equal opposing forces balance and keep an object still; when one opposing force is bigger, the object moves in that force's direction, regardless of headcount.
Fossil DigEarth and Life Science · Ages 8-12Fossils are clues preserved in rock; palaeontologists carefully uncover their shapes and positions, then fit that evidence together to infer what an extinct animal looked like.
Moss & Cog WorkshopPhysics · Ages 8-13Simple machines make jobs easier by trading force for distance or changing the direction of a force; they do not remove the load's weight or create energy.
Rainforest LayersEcology · Ages 8-12A rainforest has four vertical layers, and different animals fit each layer because light, food, movement routes, moisture, and safety change from top to bottom.
Rock RoverEarth Science · Ages 8-13Rock types are stages in a cycle: cooling makes igneous rock, surface weathering plus deposition and cementing makes sedimentary rock, heat and pressure make metamorphic rock, and melting returns rock to magma.
Body ExplorerLife Science · Ages 9-13Animal bodies contain fitted layers—skin, muscles, organs, and skeleton—and each layer has a different job while working as one connected body.
Moon Phases LampEarth and Space Science · Ages 9-12The Sun always lights half the Moon; as the Moon moves around Earth, our changing view of that same lit half makes the phases repeat in order.
Photosynthesis GreenhouseBiology · Ages 9-12Plants use light energy to rearrange atoms from water and CO₂ into sugar and oxygen; atoms regroup rather than appearing, and the scarcest required input limits production.
States of Matter ChamberChemistry · Ages 9-12Solids, liquids, and gases contain the same-sized particles with different amounts of energy: heating makes particles move faster and more freely, while cooling makes them slow down and lock closer together.
Volcano InsideEarth Science · Ages 9-13Heat and expanding trapped gas build pressure in a magma chamber; that pressure forces magma up a vent, and more stored pressure produces a bigger eruption.
Acids and Bases GardenChemistry · Ages 10-13pH measures how acidic or basic a solution is: acid lowers pH, base raises pH, and neutral is 7.
Atom ForgeChemistry · Ages 10-13Protons decide which element an atom is, neutrons change its isotope and mass, and electrons change its charge.
Cell FactoryBiology · Ages 10-13A cell works like a connected factory: specialized organelles have different jobs, and changing one limiting station can change the output of the whole system.
Density SubmarinePhysics · Ages 10-13An object sinks when it is denser than water, floats when it is less dense, and hovers when the densities match; changing mass or volume changes density.
Dragon BreederBiology · Ages 10-13An offspring receives one allele for each gene from each parent; dominant alleles can mask recessive alleles, and a Punnett square predicts probabilities rather than guaranteeing one outcome.
Element LabChemistry · Ages 10-13The periodic table is a map: atomic number identifies an element by its proton count, periods are rows, groups are columns with related properties, and symbols are short element names.
Food Web BalanceBiology · Ages 10-13Energy flows from food to eater, so changing one population can send rises, falls, booms, and crashes through several links of a food web.
Heart Pump LabBiology · Ages 10-13The heart is a pump: each muscle squeeze raises pressure, one-way valves direct that pressure into forward blood flow, and body demand changes how quickly the pump repeats.
Light Reflection MazePhysics · Ages 10-13Light travels in straight lines and reflects from a mirror so its angle away from the normal equals its angle toward the normal.
Seasons GlobeEarth Science · Ages 10-13Earth's fixed axial tilt changes how directly sunlight hits each hemisphere: direct light is concentrated, while slanted light spreads the same energy over more area and heats less.
Solubility KitchenChemistry · Ages 10-13A liquid can dissolve only a limited amount of solute at a given temperature. Heating usually raises that limit, while cooling can make some dissolved solute become solid again.
Sound MixerPhysics · Ages 10-13Frequency controls pitch and amplitude controls loudness; either one can change without changing the other.
Soup MoleculesChemistry · Ages 10-13Heating gives particles more energy, so they move faster on average; the fastest particles at a liquid's surface can escape as vapor, which is evaporation and can cool the liquid left behind.
Survive the IslandBiology · Ages 10-13Inherited traits vary within a population; when an environment lets better-suited individuals survive and reproduce more, those traits become more frequent over generations, so the population evolves.
TectonicsEarth Science · Ages 10-13Tectonic plates keep moving, and pulling apart, pushing together, or sliding past creates predictable patterns of ridges, mountains, volcanoes, and earthquakes.
Getting the most out of science games at this age
- Always get the prediction first — 'what do you think will happen?' turns play into an experiment.
- Wrong predictions are the good ones. Celebrate the surprise, then ask what changed their mind.
- Connect the game to the kitchen: melting butter is states of matter, a bath drain is a force, dinner is a food chain.
Common questions
What science skills should year 5 learn?
4th grade is energy year: how energy transfers, waves, circuits and electricity, plus earth's changing surface and how animals process information. Circuits especially reward simulation — kids can safely short things that would pop a real fuse.
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.