What's inside
CodeQuest — 40 robot levels
Drag instruction blocks to guide a robot through a maze. Difficulty rises from three steps to loops and nested logic — every level tested to be solvable.
Nine topics to understand
Computers, algorithms, loops, bugs, the internet, data, robots, games and secret codes — explained without jargon.
Debugging as a skill
A whole topic on bugs: children learn that a program failing is normal, and that finding why is the actual job.
Seven kinds of game
Quiz, true-or-false, memory, matching, drag-and-drop, odd-one-out and puzzles reinforce each topic.
No reading or typing needed
Instructions are icons, not words, so a four-year-old can start CodeQuest before learning to read.
The pioneers of computing
Short portraits of the people who built the field — so children see who does this work, and that they could too.
Frequently asked questions
At what age can a child start CodoKids?
From about 4. The CodeQuest instructions are icons rather than words, so a child who cannot read yet can already solve the first levels. The topics and later levels suit up to about 13.
Does my child need to be good at maths?
No. Coding builds the same thinking maths uses — sequencing, logic, patterns — so it usually helps maths rather than requiring it.
Is there any real programming language?
Not yet. CodoKids deliberately stops at block-based logic, which is the right first step; text languages come later, once the thinking is in place.
Does CodoKids work offline?
Yes. All 40 levels, the nine topics and every game are stored in the app.
