The skill behind memory
Train your short-term and working memory. Every game in this category is built around that one skill, so your score reflects a focused measurement rather than a blurry average.
Short-term and working memory
Visual and spatial recall
Sequence and position tracking
8 memory games
Each game adapts its difficulty to you and scores every session.
Stargaze
Memorise a constellation of stars, then tap them back from memory.
Echo
Watch the lighthouse beam tap a sequence around the petals — then echo it back, sometimes in reverse.
Lattice
Tap the node when its position matches the position a few flashes back. Don’t be fooled by near-misses.
Mosaic
Flip three same-symbol tiles in a row to lock a triplet. The streak resets the moment you pick wrong.
Lantern
Tap a lantern when its sigil matches the one from N positions ago. At L4+, only when they share a family.
Rush
Each guest flashes their order, then it vanishes — serve the right dish to the right guest from memory before their patience runs out.
Thimble
Watch where the coloured balls hide, follow the cups as they shuffle, then tap the cup holding the colour you are asked for.
Pagoda
Memorise the carved tiles, then clear the pagoda by matching free pairs — the stack collapses as you go, so remember what falls into reach.
How memory feeds your score
Behind every game is a per-skill rating that adjusts as you play. Your Memory rating is one of six that roll up — by a fixed weighting — into a single Brain Fitness Index from 0 to 100.Memory contributes roughly 20% of that number, so progress here moves your overall index.
CogDojo is built to measure your training and keep you engaged. It is not a medical product and does not claim to improve real-world performance or prevent cognitive decline.