WeightPlay
Animal Quiz
WeightPlay
Animal Quiz is a free bilingual Kids knowledge game with 30 saved stages and ten different animals in every stage. Its 20-animal library ranges from lions, elephants, giraffes and zebras to penguins, whales, pandas, koalas, owls, frogs, pets and farm animals. Early questions pair a clear portrait with one body-feature clue. Later investigations blur the portrait, turn it into a silhouette, add a fourth choice, or combine facts about habitat, behavior, diet and appearance. Every fifth stage is a Junior Expert Check that recombines ideas already introduced. There is no countdown, and a wrong choice never ends the stage.
The campaign is an animal investigation trail rather than a rescue or battle. The player is an observer building a field notebook one correct identification at a time. Every portrait, name and written clue describes the same target animal. Completing ten identifications closes the current notebook chapter, saves the clear and unlocks the next investigation.
The facts provide the reason for each choice. A lion can be connected through its mane, African grassland home and pride behavior; a penguin through cold coasts, fish and huddling; an elephant through its trunk, plant diet and water-spraying behavior. Clearing Stage 30 means the player has completed six lesson groups and the final mixed-evidence check.
Each stage contains ten unique target animals. Introductory stages show three answer names; later mixed, food and expert checks show four without shrinking the controls.
Standard portraits support recognition. Mystery stages deliberately soften detail, while silhouette stages remove color so outline and written clues matter more. The image keeps an accessible animal name.
Feature clues describe visible traits, habitat clues explain where an animal lives, action clues describe behavior, and diet clues identify food. Expert stages combine two or three clue families.
A wrong answer gives gentle feedback and leaves the question open. A correct answer locks the choices for a short visible-time learning pause, shows an animal note, and advances.
Clearing all ten questions saves the stage, best result and next unlock in local browser storage. Result can replay the investigation or return to the exact completed card.
There is no account, leaderboard, purchase, timer, life meter or formal grade. Clearing all 30 stages is the campaign success condition; replay supports review and a new ten-out-of-ten attempt.
Stages 1–5, Picture Introductions, establish the animal library with clear portraits and feature clues. Stage 5 adds a second clue and four choices.
Stages 6–10, Habitat Homes, use softened mystery images and make location evidence important. Stage 10 combines habitat and feature facts.
Stages 11–15, Feature Detectives, use silhouettes to test outline recognition. Stage 15 ends the chapter with mixed clues and four choices.
Stages 16–20, Animal Actions, focus on movement and social behavior. Stage 20 combines behavior with habitat.
Stages 21–25, Food and Families, use four choices and diet clues. Stage 25 adds appearance evidence to the food question.
Stages 26–30, Junior Expert Mix, combine two clues with mystery images or silhouettes. Stage 30 uses four choices, a silhouette and three connected feature, habitat and behavior clues.
Ten questions revisit one lesson without making a Kids session feel like a long test. Difficulty grows by changing which evidence remains useful, not by shrinking targets or adding time pressure. Blur and silhouette are teaching modes rather than hidden hitboxes; large native answer buttons remain available to touch, mouse and keyboard. The fixed logical layout scales uniformly across phones, tablets, short landscape and desktop. The learning pause counts only visible play time, so an app switch cannot silently skip the fact. Unlike WeightPlay matching or action games, factual evidence is the entire decision. The Kids route creates no advertising request, reserve, account, purchase, ranking or diagnostic claim.
Animal Quiz can support conversations about animal names, habitats, diets, body features and behavior. Children who are still learning to read can play with an adult who reads each clue aloud. Saved stars and the Skill Report describe only this play session; they are not a school grade, IQ result, developmental diagnosis or comparison with other children. Progress stays in the current browser and may disappear if local storage is cleared. No child profile is required, and the Kids route requests no advertising.