My 4 favorite Windows PC games for kids in 2024


When knowing what kids’ games are the best for growing minds, there seems to be this grey area. Is it colorful, cute, conveys meaning, and is it age-appropriate? The games I discuss in this list balance learning life lessons and fun time passers. There is SO MUCH to choose from with healthy discussions on topics such as death and learning life lessons to building your slice of paradise in survival games.

And please remember to check the contents of your children’s games before buying them. Just because a specific game might look cute and be colorful doesn’t mean it will automatically be okay for your child. There are themes, motifs, and story devices unsuitable for growing minds unless a parent supervises them. 

4. When the Past Was Around

When the Past Was Around is a charming point and click game. (Image credit: steam)

When the Past Was Around is a point-and-click game discussing loss, life, and the process of understanding death. This game teaches kids that being in the moment with life is so incredibly important. From mundane tasks to looking for specific items, this game is calculated based on what it wants to bring to the player.

When the Past Was Around is a calm, peaceful experience that doesn’t barrage the players with sadness throughout the game but just enough that it showcases a beautifully executed story and process that takes the player through the motion like the player character. The beauty in the aesthetic of the game, the calm music that takes you through an almost abstract train of thought at the start of the game, When the Past Was Around showcases a vulnerability in its presentation, carrying a weight to it that is relatable and tangible.

With this game being a point and click I feel as if it drives the simplicity of the message home even more so.  Sometimes simple games, with soft narratives are the best way to convey a point or a feeling, and this game captures the feeling of trying to move on from loss beautifully.

3. Don’t Starve

Face your arachnophobia in Don’t Starve. (Image credit: steam)

Don’t Starve is a quaint little game that is a massive time sink in the best way possible. Think of a Tim Burton version of Animal Crossings. You can craft, use magic, and explore a survival-based game where anything is possible. This game will throw you in with no explanations, nothing. Having kids figure their way around this title will surely get the neurons firing!

This game is about problem-solving and understanding what resources you have at your disposal and what things you have to MacGyver. It is silly and fun; surviving is a task and a half while surviving the raining frogs is a feat.  When you start this game there isn’t a right or wrong way to begin. You journey around the land and can do anything you want, which seems daunting but, in reality, gives the player a lot of freedom to create and not be bound by a linear experience.

2. Cozy Grove

A journey of color in Cozy Grove. (Image credit: steam)

This has to be, by far, one of the most relaxing and cutest games I’ve ever played. Cozy Grove takes you on a journey to help spirits inhabiting a forest and bring color and happiness back to their world. You can craft, go fishing, and explore character dialogue to add more color to your surroundings!

This game shows kids (and anyone who plays it) that everyone’s story is important; it holds meaning and carries weight. The game over-dramatizes (not heavily) this meaning for effect, but the sentiment of the power of the story of one’s life is still present, and I love that.

Sitting in bed, relaxing, and playing this with a warm cup of tea at the end of the day is pure bliss. The tasks become almost like second nature, and seeing the screen fill with color after completing a task or talking with one of the ghosts is a pure shot of dopamine. 

1. Death’s Door

Not as morbid as you’d think. (Image credit: steam)

Death becomes a corporate job in this game, making the vibe and overall story appealing and funny. Death’s Door (check out our review here) creates the notion that death isn’t a scary thing, and the way it goes about that explanation is why this game sits at number one. 





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