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Which Brain Games Will Help Your Brain the Most?

Do you know that brain is one of the important think in our body? our brain is the center of the human nervous system and is a highly complex organ. It gives us the power to think, plan, speak, imagine... It is truly an amazing organ. How if we never use it?? it will become useless...
Here i give you the list of game that will train your brain.

Brainist

A collection of free games and brain-related materials testing pattern-matching skills, memory, language and math skills, strategy, and more.

What’s unique: Sheer scope. Any and all things brainy and game-y can be found here, from number mnemonics to the most commonly used words in three languages to a speculative list of the smartest people ever.

Downsides: The site is a bit disorganized. You can’t track the gains you make in individual games.

Bonus: A classic IQ test like the one you might have taken as a teenager. Remember what you got then?

Summed up: All kinds of stuff to keep you entertained, though a bit scatterbrained. Check out the “Strategy Games” puzzle featuring six frogs sitting on seven rocks that must be hopped, one stone at a time, over each other’s heads. It’s marvelously frustrating.

Fit Brains

Comprehensive brain fitness site featuring 10 games plus a word challenge for team play. Tests fall into five cognitive categories: memory, language, concentration, logic/reasoning, and visuospatial skills. Sports a blog and a list of scientific advisers. Boasts “Guilt Free Fun!”

What’s unique: Complex, richly illustrated and thought-out games with different levels and basic story lines. For example, in “Hidden Masterpiece” you are a painting-repair specialist who sells reconstructed works of art at auction, testing visuospatial ability and concentration.

Downsides: After a seven-day free trial expires, the site is $9.95 a month or $79.95 a year. Some games may actually be too complex and time-consuming. In “Busy Bistro” you scan ingredients and cooking instructions, then try to remember the items by filling out a virtual grocery list. That’s just for starters: One round takes almost five minutes, and there are five more courses to follow.

Bonus: Get real recipes from “Busy Bistro,” like Crab and Swiss Melts.

Summed up: Very dynamic. Feels as if you are playing a console-based game at times. You can subscribe to track your progress and meet other Fit Brainers. Suitable for the committed brain athlete.

Games for the Brain


Enjoyable time killers, including standbys like checkers, sudoku, and chess, as well as original exercises like guessing (and then recalling) a country’s flag. Probes memory, pattern-matching abilities, spatial skills, and more.

What’s unique: Less hype—just lets you play. Simple scoring mechanism means you spend less time worrying about the clock and more solving the problem.

Downsides: Some of the games feel more, well, game-y than brainy.

Bonus: After entering a ticket number earned during your workout, you can see a prize image.

Summed up: A quick one-stop site for a dose of mental gymnastics. Lots of free games to choose from without any commitments, financial or otherwise. But you may not stick around for very long.

The Brainwaves Center


Mostly a puzzle-book shop and source for brain-gain advice; the site also features games testing language, mathematics, and memory skills.

What’s unique: New types of crosswords involving letters or numbers, timed for speed. Example: An “alphabetic” has only 26 spaces, one for each letter of the alphabet, which comes up just once per game.

Downsides: Games can be played only once before it’s all reruns. Superbasic visuals are mostly black-and-white.

Bonus: Cool crosswords!

Summed up: Although the games are neat, getting to play them only once is a bummer.

Brain Arena

Billed as “massive multiplayer online brain-training,” the Web site hosts contests challenging players’ visuospatial skills, arithmetic ability, and reaction time.
What’s unique: Competition among thousands of mind-gamers trying to beat one another’s scores. Winners crowned every 24 hours.
Downsides: Repetitive games that reward your quickness to click a mouse as much as your acumen. Almost 80,000 people have joined the site, but it still feels junior varsity: Some tasks, such as a tiered addition problem, are either poorly explained or not explained at all.

Bonus: Cheeky names for players’ rankings: You start off as a puny Habilis, work your way up to Sapiens—and if you keep at it, achieve Cibernetis status.
Summed up: The site feels a bit like it’s under development, but the league-play aspect is intriguing—especially for those with a competitive streak.

Lumosity
A cleanly constructed site that is serious about representing the science of brain games, referencing studies and neuroscientists who support this approach to brain fitness. Tests memory, processing speed, attention, and cognitive control, which is basically impulse restraint.

What’s unique: Lets you set up a training program with regimented sessions and claims to offer a full workout in only 10 minutes.

Downsides: Just as expensive as Fit Brains but less visually appealing. Some games feel more clinical than creative.

Bonus: Waddling, animated penguinlike characters are cute.

Summed up: Solid, absorbing exercises that strike a good balance between basic playability and complexity, though a bit blah at times. After signing up, the Web site tracks your progress and tells you what to do. After all, if you’re doing neuro-workouts, you might as well get a personal trainer. (Full disclosure: DISCOVER links to Lumosity games from the sidebar on certain pages.)

Try it...

 
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