WordLab

WordLab turns any topic your child is interested in into five different vocabulary games, generated in seconds by AI.
Your child types a topic like "Dinosaurs" or "Arsenal players" and gets a crossword with real clues, a word search grid, an unjumble challenge, a missing letters game, and a Who Am I guessing game. All built around the words from their chosen topic.
We built WordLab after watching our 8-year-old get bored with generic word games. He loved crosswords but wanted them about things he actually cared about. Now he plays the Arsenal crossword on repeat and his 6-year-old sister prefers the word search and unjumble games.
There is no signup, no ads, no data collection, and no cost. It runs in the browser on any device. The AI generates the content but stays invisible to kids. They just see a word game about their favourite topic.
Video tutorial
Safety
Key Features
Five game types from a single topic input: crossword with AI-generated clues, word search, unjumble, missing letters, and Who Am I. One topic gives 30+ minutes of varied play across different difficulty levels.
Any topic your child chooses becomes the game. Football teams, dinosaurs, planets, Pokemon, countries. The AI generates age-appropriate clues and word lists in seconds, keeping kids engaged because they picked the subject.
Guardian-style crossword layout with proper intersecting clues, not just simple definitions. Kids get check word, reveal, and hint buttons. The crossword alone can hold an 8-year-old for 15+ minutes.
Zero friction to start playing. No account, no signup, no ads, no data collection. Open the browser, type a topic, pick a game. Works on phones, tablets, and desktops with the same clean interface.
Family Projects
- Creating custom revision games for school topics by typing subjects like "human body organs" or "countries of Europe" and using the crossword and word search to test knowledge before exams
- Building a football vocabulary challenge for match days by generating word games about your child's favourite team, then racing to complete them before kickoff
- Practising spelling with missing letters games on topics your child finds interesting, turning a homework task into something they actually want to do
- Running a family game night by generating the same topic for everyone and competing to finish the crossword or find all words in the word search first



