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🌈 Kishu Play
Fun Learning for Little Ones — Ages 2 to 5 🎉
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For Parents & Caregivers: Kishu Play is designed for children aged 2–5 and works best when enjoyed together. We recommend supervising your little one during screen time and using each activity as a springboard for real-world conversations — like counting toys at home or spotting colours on a walk. All our games are free, safe, and contain no chat features or external links from the game areas.

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Hello, Little Learner! 👋

Tap a game below to start your adventure! 10 fun activities covering letters, numbers, colours, shapes, animals, food, body parts, weather, vehicles and nursery rhymes — all completely free!

🎮 Choose Your Adventure!

🧠 Did You Know?

🎵 Music helps babies remember!
🌈 Colours boost creativity
🐾 Animals teach empathy
🔢 Counting builds maths skills early
🔤 Letters before age 3 = head start!
🚗 Vehicles teach movement & directions
🌦️ Weather talk builds science thinking
💪 Body parts help kids describe themselves

Welcome to Kishu Play — Free Educational Games for Toddlers & Preschoolers

Kishu Play is a free, safe, and ad-supported educational website designed especially for toddlers and preschoolers aged 2 to 5. Our ten interactive games make early learning genuinely fun — helping young children build essential foundations in language, maths, science awareness, and social-emotional skills before they start school.

We believe that the best learning happens when children are playing happily alongside a trusted adult. That's why every activity on Kishu Play is designed to be enjoyed together — with a parent, grandparent, older sibling, or caregiver right there to talk, point, repeat, and celebrate every small discovery.

Why Play Together? A Note for Parents

Screen time quality matters more than screen time quantity. Research from early childhood development consistently shows that co-viewing — where a caregiver engages with the child during media — dramatically increases learning outcomes compared to solo use. When you sit beside your toddler and say "That's a banana — can you say banana?" you are building language, memory, and emotional connection all at once.

We designed every Kishu Play activity with this in mind: short sessions (10–15 minutes), clear audio, and simple interactions that naturally prompt conversations with the grown-ups in a child's life.

What We Teach — 10 Learning Areas

  • Alphabet (ABC Adventure): All 26 letters with phonics sounds, picture words, and an interactive quiz.
  • Numbers (Count & Pop): Counting from 1 to 20 through balloon-popping fun.
  • Colours (Color Safari): Red, blue, yellow and more — matched to real animals on a safari.
  • Animals (Animal Sounds): Over 20 animals with their real names and characteristic sounds.
  • Shapes (Shape Puzzle): Circles, squares, triangles, rectangles, stars and hearts.
  • Food & Nutrition (Fruit & Food): Fruits, vegetables, and meals — building a healthy vocabulary.
  • Music & Language (Sing & Dance): Classic nursery rhymes with animated word-by-word lyrics.
  • Body Awareness (My Body): Head, eyes, ears, nose, arms, legs and all key body parts.
  • Science & Nature (Weather World): Sun, rain, wind, snow — introducing weather concepts early.
  • Vehicles & Transport (Vehicle Vroom): Cars, trains, planes, boats and more — building world knowledge.

Safe, Ad-Supported, and Always Free

Kishu Play is 100% free for every family. To keep it that way, we display advertisements through Google AdSense. All ads on our site are reviewed and family-friendly. We do not collect personal data from children, require any registration, or include links that take children outside the site from within the game areas. Parents can read our full Privacy Policy for complete details.

We strongly encourage parents to supervise their child's use of this website. While we take every care to ensure a safe experience, parental guidance is always the best safeguard.

Tips for Getting the Most from Kishu Play

  • Keep sessions to 10–15 minutes — young children learn better in short, repeated bursts than long sessions.
  • Sit with your child for the first few activities to model how the games work and share in the fun.
  • Encourage your child to say words, letters, and numbers out loud — hearing themselves speak is powerful.
  • After playing, bring learning into real life: count stairs, name foods at dinner, point out animals on a walk.
  • Celebrate every attempt — getting it wrong is a normal and valuable part of learning at this age.