Amazon / Education / LEARN MATH ADDITION QUIZ GAMES
REVIEW
Learn Math Addition Quiz Games is a drill book in app form.
A free Fire tablet app that teaches addition the way flashcards do — one sum at a time, with a tap-the-answer loop that asks nothing of the parent and not much of the child.
BY THE APP COMRADE DESK · MAY 11, 2026 · 3 MIN READ
Learn Math Addition Quiz Games
THE LEARNING APPS
OUR SCORE
6.4
AMAZON
★ 5.0
PRICE
Free
Amazon’s Fire tablet store is a particular place. Alongside the major-publisher kids’ apps and the FreeTime curation lives a long tail of free, lightly produced education titles built to fill a category — and Learn Math Addition Quiz Games sits squarely in that tail. It is a 2020-era arithmetic drill app from a developer called The Learning Apps, and it still has the bones of every quiz game you have ever handed a five-year-old.
That isn’t a complaint, exactly. There is a real use for an app that does nothing but show a sum and four buttons. The question is whether it does that one thing well enough to earn space on the home screen of a Fire Kids tablet competing with hundreds of better-resourced alternatives.
The honest answer is: barely. It works. It is free. It will not teach a child anything they don’t already half-know, but for the child who half-knows addition and needs to drill it into reflex, the loop is fine.
It is a flashcard deck rendered in primary colors, which is exactly what some kids need and exactly what other kids will close after four minutes.
FEATURES
The app does one thing: it shows a child an addition problem and four possible answers, the child taps one, and the app moves on. Sums sit in the early-elementary range — single digits building toward two-digit addition as the levels progress. There are no story modes, no characters with names, no narrative scaffolding around the math itself.
Levels gate by difficulty rather than by topic. A correct streak unlocks slightly harder sums; a wrong answer prompts a retry rather than an explanation. Audio cues and bright color reinforce right and wrong. The interface is large-tap-target and built for the Fire tablet's lower-end screens, which is the right call for the four-to-eight-year-old audience this is aimed at.
It is free, has no in-app purchases according to the store listing, and runs entirely offline once installed.
MISSION ACCOMPLISHED
The app knows what it is. It does not try to be Khan Academy Kids and it does not try to be a game. It is a flashcard deck rendered in primary colors, which is exactly what some kids need and exactly what other kids will close after four minutes. The price is zero and the friction to hand it to a child is zero — no account, no onboarding, no upsell to a premium tier the parent didn't know existed.
For the specific use case of a kindergartener or first-grader who needs to drill addition facts to automaticity, the loop works. Repetition is the point, and the app does not get in the way of repetition.
ROOM TO IMPROVE
There is no teaching. A child who doesn't already understand addition will not learn it here — wrong answers get a buzzer and a retry rather than a worked-through explanation, and there is no visual model (counters, number line, ten-frame) that maps the symbol to the quantity. That makes this useful as practice once a concept is taught, and useless as a first encounter with the operation.
Production values are thin. Sound design is repetitive enough to become a parental hazard inside ten minutes, and the visual style is closer to clip-art than to the polished kids' apps Amazon's own FreeTime catalogue ships with. There is also no progress tracking a parent can review — no log of which sums a child missed, no report card, no way to set a session length.
CONCLUSION
A serviceable free drill app for a child who already grasps what addition means and needs reps. It is not a curriculum, not a tutor, and not a long-term install — most kids will outgrow it inside a few weeks. Use it on a Fire tablet during a long car trip and uninstall it without regret.