The app covers the basics—numbers up to 20, letter recognition, simple addition—but it does it with actual variety. One minute you’re tracing a wobbly “A” with your finger, the next you’re sorting shapes by color or tapping the right number of fish in a pond. There are also logic puzzles that make kids think: “Which one doesn’t belong?” or “What comes next in this pattern?” Those are the ones that keep my kid engaged longer than I expected. The graphics are bright but not overwhelming, and the voice instructions are clear enough that she can play without me hovering.
What surprised me most is how the app adjusts. If my kid gets a pattern wrong twice, it doesn’t just flash a red X—it slows down and gives a hint. If she’s breezing through number games, it quietly bumps up the difficulty. No pop-ups telling you she’s “behind” or “ahead,” just a smooth flow. There’s no ads either, which is a relief for a free app with this many downloads. You can unlock extra content with a subscription, but the free version has plenty to keep a preschooler busy for weeks.
I’d recommend LogicLike for any kid between three and seven, especially if they’re the type who needs a little nudge to practice letters or counting. One tip: let them explore the menu on their own. My daughter found a section about dinosaurs that I didn’t even know existed, and she spent a whole afternoon matching baby dinos to their shadows. That kind of discovery is what makes this app stick.