Kids learn by building games they love.
Your child practices math, reading, science and problem-solving while inventing their own games with Loo, their AI buddy.

How learning happens with Buildaloo
Four simple steps. Loo turns 'what do you want to learn?' into a game your child wants to play.
Say what you want to learn
Multiplication tables? Spelling? The water cycle? Your child tells Loo in their own words.
Loo finds or proposes a game
Loo picks a curriculum-fit game from the library or proposes a brand-new one shaped around exactly what your child wants to learn.
Tweak it or build a new one
Adjust the difficulty, swap the world, change the characters, or build a fresh game from scratch with Loo guiding the way.
Play, learn and share
Your child plays, picks up the concept while having fun, and shares the game with friends and family.
What your child actually practices
Real skills, hidden inside the play. Every game your child builds works on one or more of these.
Math
Counting, multiplication, money and time, built right into quiz and puzzle games.
Reading and spelling
Vocabulary, phonics and storytelling, all while your child shapes their own game.
Science and nature
Animals, space, the human body. Kids pick up fun facts while Loo builds the game.
Creativity
Worlds, characters and stories, all invented by your child. No templates, no scripts.
Problem solving
Designing rules and fixing what does not work. Kids learn to think like makers.
Confidence
Finishing a real game and sharing it gives kids a kind of pride no worksheet ever could.
Why this works better than worksheets
Two findings about how kids actually learn.
Building beats consuming
To build a game about a concept, your child has to understand it well enough to teach it back to Loo. Active creation locks knowledge in deeper than passive review ever could.
Playing beats drilling
Concepts learned inside a game your child wants to play stick. Motivation does the heavy lifting — your child practices longer and remembers more, without any battle.
Personalized to how your child learns
Learning-type assessment
Loo gently figures out whether your child learns best by seeing, hearing or doing, and leans into that style for every game.
Custom learning songs
For listener-learners, Loo can write a custom song that teaches the concept so your child can sing it.
Built for parents who want screen time to mean something.
Your child creates, learns, and explores. You stay in control of the rest.
At Buildaloo, "something" means:
Making things, not just watching them.
Your child invents games with Loo: pirate mazes, flying cats, a puzzle for grandma. Real games they can share.
School topics that go past the worksheet.
Volcanoes, fractions, the water cycle. Whatever they're learning in class, Loo helps them go further.
Curiosities that get a real answer.
'Why is the sky blue?' becomes a conversation, not a search result they scroll past.
Voice and ideas, not silent scrolling.
Talking to Loo means your child is forming words and thoughts out loud the whole time.
You stay in control
Parent dashboard
See what your child is building, read conversation summaries, and review every game they create.
Daily limits
Set how much time your child spends per day. Loo gently lets them know when it's time to stop.
Content moderation
Every conversation is monitored for safety. Get alerts if anything needs your attention.
Common questions
Yes. Loo also helps your child go deeper on whatever they're learning in class, like volcanoes, fractions, or the water cycle, and turns their own curiosities (like 'Why is the sky blue?') into real conversations, not search results. Same voice-first flow, three different kinds of sessions.
Bring Buildaloo to your classroom
We are working with teachers and homeschool families on a classroom plan. Kids build educational games together, and you see what they are learning. Tell us about your class and we will be in touch.
I'm a teacher — let's talk
Parents see the difference
“After two weeks, my 8-year-old knew her times tables better than her older brother. She just kept playing the game she made.”
“He used to fight us about reading. Now he picks the book, because his next game depends on it.”
“She is so proud of the games she makes, and she actually retains what she learns. It is the only screen time we never argue about.”