Brain exercises library

Quick answer: Brain exercises library on FreeCognitiveTest.org is educational guidance for habits and self-screening practice—not a medical diagnosis. Use our free browser memory demos to learn task formats; discuss persistent changes with a qualified clinician. Brain exercises are short, repeatable tasks that practice memory, attention, processing speed, and reasoning in your browser. FreeCognitiveTest.org offers them for education and habit-building—not as a prescribed…

Five cognitive domains, 100 interactive pages—free, in your browser. FreeCognitiveTest.org (Albor Digital LLC).

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Key links

How it works

Open a category, pick an exercise, and follow the on-screen rules. Most sessions take 1–3 minutes. Progress is not saved to an account—refreshing resets the task, which keeps the site lightweight and cache-friendly.

Categories

View all 100 in one list for quick scanning.

What results mean

Scores reflect performance on that exercise today. They are not a medical assessment of brain health. Use them to stay mentally active and have fun—not to diagnose injury or disease.

Topic links

Frequently asked questions

Will this prevent dementia?

No program can guarantee prevention. Staying active physically, socially, and cognitively supports overall health; discuss personal risk with your clinician.

Are the exercises mobile friendly?

Most exercises work on phones; a few are easier on a larger screen.

More content for older adults?

See BrainExercisesForSeniors.com (separate site).

Who publishes this site?

FreeCognitiveTest.orgAlbor Digital LLC.

Last reviewed: May 2026

Summary

This page provides an educational overview of the brain exercise library on FreeCognitiveTest.org. It is not personalized medical advice.

FreeCognitiveTest.org — Albor Digital LLC.