Dyslexia Doesn't Mean They Can't Read
For kids with dyslexia, it’s not about effort. it’s about brain wiring. Build the skills that make reading click.
BRAIN-BASED SUPPORT BUILT INTO EVERY GAME.
Dyslexia and brain-building skills: why it matters.
Dyslexia isn’t about intelligence. It’s a brain difference.
Common struggles include:
- Connecting sounds to letters
- Left-right directionality
- Sequencing and working memory
BrightWay Kids games meet kids with learning differences where they are. No drills. No complicated setup. Just a few minutes a day to build lasting brain change.
It's not about effort. It's about brain wiring.
Kids with dyslexia often struggle with skills like:
Eye Tracking
Can their eyes follow text smoothly from left to right?
Letter Sounds
Can they make sense of letter sounds and blend them correctly?
Sequencing
Can they hold and manipulate sounds long enough to decode words?
BrightWay Kids targets these exact brain skills through adventure-filled games. So your child can play, grow, and finally start enjoying reading.
When these skills are still developing, reading feels overwhelming, no matter hard they try. Their brain just needs more support.
BRAIN-BASED SUPPORT BUILT INTO EVERY GAME.
How BrightWay Kids works with dyslexia
Whether your child is just starting to read or is already falling behind, BrightWay Kids offers two simple ways to help:
BrightWay Kids Unlimited $79.99 / mo
Full access to our entire game library — ideal for kids with dyslexia and challenges like attention, tracking, or processing.
Your child’s subscription includes:
- Therapist-designed games that build foundational reading skills
- Activities that improve memory, sequencing, attention, and directionality
- A fun, pressure-free way to support their brain every day
No complicated setup. Start or stop anytime. Play a few minutes a day to build lasting brain change.
BrightWay Kids offers science-backed brain games for struggling readers
What these games actually do
These are more than just fun. They’re designed for brain change. Here’s how a few games support kids with dyslexia:
Sight Words
Listen to the word, then find and select it from the scene.
How it helps
Builds rapid recognition of high-frequency words, reducing decoding demands so children can focus on comprehension.
- Word recognition
- Visual memory
- Reading Fluency
Stop Go Wait
Tap on green targets, ignore red, and watch yellow to decide.
How it helps
Strengthens focus and attention control, reducing reading errors and improving comprehension.
- Focus
- Attention control
- Response Inhibition
Rocket Trail
Start at the green star, then click rockets in the correct directional sequence until reaching the red star.
How it helps
Strengthens alignment and controlled movement, reinforcing left-to-right reading and writing flow.
- Visual tracking
- Spatial awareness
- Sequencing
Hundreds of activities that keep brain-building fun
These are no ordinary games. Each one is specifically designed to strengthen brain functions like attention, impulse control, issues with eye tracking, and so much more.
Watch in real time as your child progresses through a host of adventures that lead to stronger executive functions that readers need to succeed.
You don’t need to prep, teach, or sit for hours. Just open your device and press play.
No frustration. No pressure. Just steady, daily support — right at home.
Just minutes a day. Big impact.
Common questions for parents of children with dyslexia
Frequently Asked Questions
Can games really help a child with dyslexia?
Yes — but not just any games.
BrightWay Kids uses therapist-designed brain training to improve the underlying skills that dyslexic readers struggle with: sequencing, memory, directionality, and auditory processing.
It’s not about repeating phonics. It’s about rewiring the brain so phonics can finally click.
What's the difference between BrightWay Kids and tutoring or drills?
Tutoring focuses on what to read. We focus on how the brain processes reading.
Dyslexic kids often know the sounds — they just can’t hold them in working memory long enough to decode.
That’s where BrightWay Kids comes in — building the brain’s ability to hold, sequence, and use those sounds more easily.
The result? Tutoring becomes more effective, too.
My child flips letters like b and d. Can BrightWay Kids help with that?
Yes — this is a common sign of dyslexia.
Letter reversals are usually linked to poor directionality, spatial awareness, or visual tracking — all skills we train through movement and game-based challenges.
Parents often report fewer reversals within weeks of consistent play.
Can BrightWay Kids help if my child already has a dyslexia diagnosis?
Absolutely.
BrightWay Kids games are designed with real dyslexic readers in mind — including those diagnosed with dyslexia, auditory processing disorder, or attention challenges.
Our platform supports at-home brain training between therapy, tutoring, or IEP sessions — or on its own if you’re just getting started.
What if my child avoids reading altogether?
That’s exactly why we built BrightWay Kids.
Many dyslexic children associate reading with failure or frustration.
We shift the experience to play — helping them build confidence and cognitive strength without stress.
No reading required to start — just games that train the brain behind it.
Is this only for reading problems, or does it help with other challenges too?
It helps with more than reading.
Because BrightWay Kids strengthens core brain skills, it also supports:
- Focus and attention
- Auditory memory
- Visual tracking
- Working memory
- Impulse control
Many parents of kids with dyslexia or sensory issues use BrightWay Kids as a daily brain support tool.
Open the door to adventure and fun
Subscribe and get anytime access to this reading mastery platform. A BrightWay Kids Unlimited Reading monthly subscription is $79.99.
Start or stop anytime.
A final note
BrightWay Kids isn’t a cure and it’s not a diagnosis. But it is real, science-backed support that fits into your daily life. Because when your child’s brain gets the right kind of practice…reading starts to feel easier. And even fun.