About the site
Family guide
KidsGames streams hand-tested browser games straight to your tab — no installer, no waiting, no friction. Open a category and play on any device.
Welcome to KidsGames. This guide is for parents and guardians who want a transparent picture of the site — what it streams, what we do and do not control, and how to keep play healthy at home. It does not replace the rules you set in your household; it just gives you the context to make informed decisions.
What is KidsGames?
The site is a curated library of free browser logs that play directly in the tab on most modern devices. You can browse categories, search short descriptions, and launch a game without installing anything, on a family laptop, a school Chromebook, or a phone. We build for fast first-frame and simple navigation — kids and adults alike land somewhere playable in seconds.
What the site prioritises for households
- No profile required to play the basics — most titles play without sign-in, so you are not asked for a child's inbox just to try something.
- Category clarity — labels and category descriptions help you point younger players at calmer genres (puzzle, memory, colouring, kid-friendly lists) when that fits.
- Honest third-party attribution — most logs come from external authors and hosts. The detail page credits the source. The author controls difficulty, chat, and tone; the site removes or replaces titles that clearly miss basic quality or safety expectations once we learn about them.
Why browser logs can fit family schedules
Browser logs play quickly and exit cleanly, which is helpful when dinner is on the table or homework is due. Short logs are easier to stop than open-ended titles. Many categories also reinforce coordination, pattern spotting, and logical planning — the same skills you find in plenty of offline hobbies, in moderation.
Practical tips for parents and carers
- Agree on play windows — a clear daily or weekend window works better than vague "later" and protects sleep schedules.
- Pick the right category first — puzzle, logic, and memory categories are usually a softer choice than fast-action shooters; use the category index as a guide rather than a guarantee.
- Co-play occasionally — ten minutes alongside your child shows you the controls, pacing, and any third-party ad or link prompts that may appear.
- Teach basic online hygiene — even on sites without chat, remind children not to click suspicious external links, not to share school or location details, and to flag any game asking for payment or extra data.
Ads and privacy summary
The site uses cookies and, where applicable, advertising to keep the service free. Read the Privacy Charter and Cookie Notice for full details on how data is processed and what choices you have. Where regional law provides an opt-out for personalised advertising, we honour it through the mechanisms we control.
How to reach the site
For any concern that does not fit a form, send it to contact@kids-games.uk. We aren't always instant, but child-safety and policy messages receive priority routing whenever volume allows.
