Mentilus Mentilus

Mentilus brain games

Concentration games to sharpen your focus

6 games built on classic attention tasks. Train yourself to hold focus, ignore distractions and resist the urge to react too soon.

Mail Sort

Improve your Mental Flexibility

Play brain game: Mail Sort

5.0

Quick Tap

Improve your Concentration

Play brain game: Quick Tap

5.0

Sale Dash

Improve your Mental Flexibility

Play brain game: Sale Dash

4.4

Shark

Improve your Impulse Control

Play brain game: Shark

4.6

Freeze

Improve your Focus

Upgrade to unlock brain game: Freeze

4.3

Rabbit Run

Improve your Concentration

Upgrade to unlock brain game: Rabbit Run

4.4

Why concentration deserves training

Modern life is a stress test for attention. Notifications, open tabs and constant context switching pull your focus in a dozen directions, and deep concentration starts to feel like a rare state instead of a normal one. The ability to stay on one thing is a skill, and like any skill it fades without use and sharpens with practice.

Concentration games recreate the hard parts of focusing in a controlled setting. Something on screen competes for your attention, tempts you to react, or quietly changes while you are looking elsewhere. Your job is to stay locked on what matters, and your score tells you exactly how well you did.

What our concentration games train

Sustained attention is the base layer: keeping your focus on one task without drifting. Shark and Rabbit Run make you track moving targets over time, where a single lapse costs you the round.

Selective attention is about choosing what to process. In Mail Sort and Sale Dash the screen is busy on purpose, and the game rewards you for picking out the relevant items while everything else fights for your eyes.

Inhibition is the unsung part of focus: not reacting is often harder than reacting. Freeze and Quick Tap are built around exactly that, in the style of the go/no-go tasks psychologists use to measure impulse control. You respond fast when the signal is right and hold still when it is not.

Getting more focus out of each session

Treat a training session the way you would treat focused work: one game at a time, phone out of reach, a few minutes of real attention. The sessions are short by design, so there is no need to multitask through them.

Consistency again beats volume. Attention scores tend to swing with sleep, stress and time of day, which is normal. Playing regularly gives you enough data points to see the trend underneath the noise, and your dashboard keeps that history for you.

Concentration also works closely with memory: you cannot recall what you never noticed. Many players combine these games with our memory games for that reason.

Frequently asked questions

Can I improve my attention span?

You can improve how well you hold focus on a demanding task, and these games give you a measurable way to practice that. Lifestyle still matters: sleep, exercise and fewer interruptions do a lot of the heavy lifting for attention.

Are concentration games useful for ADHD?

They are not a treatment and we make no medical claims. People with attention difficulties may still enjoy the structured, short-session format, but anyone seeking help for ADHD should talk to a healthcare professional.

How long should a focus training session be?

Each game round takes only a few minutes, and ten minutes a day is plenty. Stopping while you are still fresh keeps the quality of your attention high, which is exactly what you are training.

Which concentration game should I start with?

Freeze is a good first pick because it makes the core challenge obvious: react to the right signal, hold back on the wrong one. From there, Shark and Mail Sort add tracking and visual search to the mix.

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