Kids Friendly
Discover 51 games to play right in your browser — no downloads needed.

Find Hidden Cats
You’re staring at clean black-and-white city scenes, but the longer you look, the more they start playing tricks on you. Hidden Cats works because it keeps the idea simple: each illustration asks you to pick out 20 cats tucked into rooftops, windows, signs, and other busy little details. The European postcard vibe gives every screen personality without cluttering it with color, so your eyes have to work a bit harder. Some cats jump out immediately; others blend into the line art so well that you’ll circle the same area twice before spotting them. That makes the pacing nicely mellow rather than frantic. It’s a casual search game that understands the appeal of slow observation, and the small cat count per scene keeps each round satisfying instead of exhausting.

Arrow Puzzle
You’re working through compact maze boards where every move matters, and the appeal comes from reading the layout before you commit. Each arrow feels like a small promise: tap it at the right moment and the board opens up; tap too soon and you can trap useful routes for later. That gives Arrow Puzzle a calm, methodical rhythm instead of a frantic one. It’s less about speed than spotting which pieces are truly available and which ones only look safe at first glance. The maze theme helps the logic stand out, because clearing space gradually makes the whole board easier to read. What keeps it interesting is that satisfying chain reaction when one correct choice frees several more. It’s a simple premise, but the order of actions gives it enough bite to stay engaging without losing its relaxed, tidy feel.

Arrow Escape
You’re not racing the clock here so much as trying not to outsmart yourself. Each stage in Arrow Escape feels like a compact logic trap: a maze of directional cues that looks simple at first, then forces you to slow down and trace consequences before committing. The hook is how a single wrong assumption can send you the long way around or box you into a dead end, so progress comes from reading the layout clearly rather than guessing. That makes it a good fit for puzzle players who enjoy short levels with a clean, low-pressure presentation. The arrow theme keeps the challenge focused, and the kid-friendly tone helps it stay approachable even when a solution takes a few tries. It’s a small-scale brain teaser, but the satisfaction comes from spotting the route the level has been quietly hiding from you.

