Brain training, gamified
Quick-fire games designed to keep your brain sharp.
TurboThink is a growing collection of bite-sized challenges built for focus, recall, and speedy pattern recognition. Pick a game, race the clock, and chase the leaderboard.
⚡ Multiple Master
Find every multiple before time runs out.
Choose a number set, tap through every multiple, and climb the leaderboard. Great for warming up before deep work.
Why it works
Competition keeps your brain switched on.
When every second counts, your brain adapts: you scan faster, you commit patterns to memory, and you refine your decision making. Leaderboards turn practice into a game of inches—every run is a chance to shave off a fraction of a second and cement a neural pathway.
Healthy competition
Chasing a leaderboard sparks just enough pressure to get you into a focused, high-alert state without feeling heavy.
Think fast, react clean
Timed grids force rapid pattern recognition. The more you play, the less you hesitate, training clarity under time.
Memory through repetition
Repetition locks sequences into long-term memory. Small, frequent runs reinforce recall better than one long cram session.
Leaderboard psychology
Micro-goals keep you coming back.
See your name climb a few slots. Beat your best time by 0.12s. Compete with friends. The scoreboard turns practice into progress you can feel.
- Pick a level and set a baseline run.
- Replay quickly to encode the pattern—short, intense reps beat marathon sessions.
- Watch the leaderboard refresh and set your next target.
Warm-up
1-2 runs
Push
3-5 runs
Lock-in
1 leaderboard attempt
How TurboThink works
Three quick steps.
1
Pick a game
Start with fast, simple challenges.
2
Beat the clock
Race to improve your speed and accuracy.
3
Chase your records
Track your best times and keep leveling up.
Who it's for
Built to make practice feel like play.
For kids & students
Confidence through quick wins.
Short reps and fun repetition build recall without the grind.
For parents & teachers
Practice that feels like a game.
Turn drills into a race instead of a fight—let the leaderboard do the nudging.