Brain training games are built around short, structured mental challenges: remember a pattern, match the shapes, react at the right moment, ignore the wrong signal, solve the puzzle, try again. For ADHD brains, that structure can be helpful because it gives attention something clear and immediate to grab onto. There is no vague command to “focus better.” There is simply the next move.
The science behind these games usually connects to executive function — the brain skills involved in working memory, attention control, response inhibition, and task persistence. These are areas where many people with ADHD run into friction. Not because they are lazy, careless, or incapable, but because the brain has trouble regulating where attention goes, how long it stays there, and how easily it gets pulled away.
That is where brain training games can offer some value. They create a low-stakes practice space for attention. The rules are visible. The feedback is quick. Progress shows up right away. For some ADHD brains, that makes these games easier to engage with than a traditional productivity system, which often requires the exact planning, patience, and consistency ADHD likes to throw into traffic.
The catch is important: getting better at a brain training game does not automatically mean life gets easier. You might simply become better at that game. The useful question is not, “Did my score improve?” The useful question is, “Did this help me start, switch, remember, or stay with something outside the app?”
Perfect. I will improve my focus using the same device that contains messages, email, weather alerts, banking anxiety, shopping carts, weird videos, and seventeen apps I downloaded to become a better person before immediately abandoning them.
That said, if a five-minute puzzle helps me start the task I have been avoiding for three hours, I am not above it. I do not need magic. I need a small door into motion.
Pick one brain training game and use it for 5–10 minutes before a task that usually gives you trouble. Do this for 14 days. Track only three things: did it help you start, did it help you stay with the next task, and was it easy enough to repeat? If yes, it may be a useful focus warm-up. If no, delete it without guilt.
Brain training games are not a cure for ADHD, and they should not be treated like one. But as a small tool — a warm-up, a transition aid, a way to practice attention before doing the harder thing — they can earn their place. The goal is not to turn your brain into a productivity machine. The goal is to find one small beam through the fog.
“So we’re fixing focus with the same rectangle that contains texts, email, shopping carts, weather alerts, banking anxiety, and 47 ways to disappear for an hour?”
Fair.
But if a 5-minute brain game helps you start the task you’ve been avoiding?
Worth testing.