Collection

Arcade & Brain Games

Play free browser-based arcade games and brain-training puzzles with daily challenges, score tracking, and instant play — no downloads or accounts needed.

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Why this collection exists

TeaFun's arcade games are built for short, focused sessions — each one designed around a single interesting mechanic. Whether you want a quick puzzle before work or a relaxed rhythm challenge in the evening, this collection has something that fits.

Common use cases

  • Take the daily challenge in ChromaCode or EdgeSum as a five-minute warm-up before you start work.
  • Beat your own high score in StackDrop or the Visual Memory Test and watch it climb over the week.
  • Switch between a logic puzzle, a physics game, and a drawing challenge when you want variety in one sitting.

What This Collection Covers

Eight small browser games, each built around one clear idea rather than a sprawling system. Some are logic puzzles with a single daily solution — ChromaCode hides a five-colour code to crack in six guesses, EdgeSum is a 5x5 grid you fill so every row and column matches its clues, and KnightMaze asks you to collect every coin with a chess knight in the fewest moves. Others lean on reflexes or feel: ArcSwing is a one-button pendulum, StackDrop is a stacking game where overhang slices away, and BloomStroke is a symmetrical drawing challenge. Two are pure memory tests — visual grid patterns and digit spans. Most refresh with a new daily board, so there is a reason to come back.

How to Play

Every game runs in the tab with no download and no account, and your scores and streaks are saved locally in the browser. The daily-challenge games — ChromaCode, EdgeSum, KnightMaze, ArcSwing, BloomStroke, and StackDrop — give everyone the same board each day, so a streak is something you build by showing up. If you would rather not wait for tomorrow, several offer an unlimited or practice mode. The memory tests scale difficulty automatically: they keep adding to the pattern or the digit sequence until you slip, then report how far you got. Pick whichever matches your mood — there is no tutorial wall to clear first.

Why Short Daily Games

A game you can finish in a few minutes fits into the gaps in a day in a way a long session never will — a coffee break, a commute, the moment before a meeting. The daily format adds a small, low-stakes reason to return without the pressure of a grind: one board, done, come back tomorrow. Because each game is built around a single mechanic, there is nothing to relearn after a week away, and the variety across the set means you can pick logic when you want to think and reflexes when you do not. They are made to be a pleasant pause, not another thing to keep up with.

Featured tools

FAQ

Do these games save my progress?

Yes — scores and streaks are saved locally in your browser. Daily challenge completion persists across sessions so you can maintain your streak.

Are these games suitable for all ages?

All games are family-friendly, browser-based, and involve no violence, ads, or in-app purchases. They are designed to be quick and engaging for all ages.

What is a daily challenge?

Several games generate one shared board per day, the same for everyone, so completing it builds a streak. ChromaCode, EdgeSum, KnightMaze, ArcSwing, BloomStroke, and StackDrop all work this way; come back the next day for a fresh board.

Can I keep playing after the daily puzzle?

Yes, for several titles. StackDrop has an unlimited mode, and the Visual Memory and Number Memory tests run as long as you keep succeeding. The pure daily puzzles reset with a new board the following day.