Visual pattern drills
Spatial Attention Circuit
Put the spatial and vibe-style games into one useful attention routine instead of a scattered game shelf.
Best for
- Mental reset
- Visual focus
- Attention practice
- Low-reading warm-up
Trains
- Visual attention
- Rotation
- Shape matching
- Pattern tracking
Output
One visual strategy noticed, such as scanning edges, grouping shapes, or slowing down.
What this circuit should produce
- One rotation result
- One shape-fit result
- One path-estimation result
- One visual cue to reuse
Practice signal
What gets better with practice
This circuit gives your brain a non-verbal warm-up. It is useful when word-heavy work feels stale because it shifts practice toward rotation, shape fit, path tracking, and visual comparison.
Learn the skill behind this circuit
These guides explain the thinking habit this circuit is trying to train.
Practice before your run
Use one standalone game or calculator first, then come back for a full Cognitive Boost circuit.
Daily Game
Daily Unscramble
Best for Unscramble Practice. Gives Language Pattern a tougher word-shape task before reflection.
Use toolGame
Sudoku
Best for Grid Scan. Sudoku supports scanning, candidate checking, and attention to position.
Use toolGame
VibeCircuit
Best for Path Tracking. Trains following a path without losing place or crossing constraints.
Use toolChoose your run
Choose session length
You do not have to do the full circuit every time. A short completed run is better than skipping the habit completely.
How scoring works for a Standard Run
A Standard Run can earn up to 1,500 points. The score rewards completion, station results, reflection clarity, and finishing the selected run. Pace points only unlock after all required stations are finished, and suspiciously fast runs do not receive a pace bonus.
- Completion
- up to 500 points
- Pace
- up to 200 points
- Station results
- up to 500 points
- Reflection clarity
- up to 200 points
- Full-run bonus
- up to 100 points
Your score is not a medical, psychological, or educational measurement. A lower score may reflect fatigue, stress, distraction, unfamiliarity, or rushing.
Station runner
Do one station, score it, then the runner moves to the next station.
Visual Cue Drill
Practice noticing shape, color, position, or direction changes.
Why it is here
Practice noticing shape, color, position, or direction changes.
What to do
Complete one visual attention drill.
One-sentence takeaway
What is one thing you noticed during this run?
Tip: keep this short. Do not write private medical, financial, family, or relationship details here.
Today's circuit leaderboard
Standard and Deep runs use separate daily boards. Light Runs and skipped runs stay local. Takeaway text is never submitted to the leaderboard.
Standard Run board
Deep Run board
Practice this station separately
Want to improve before your next full circuit? Try these standalone tools.
Related cognitive guides
Related circuits
Decision Sprint
A 15-minute chain for people who want a short thinking reset before choosing what to do next.
Language Pattern
A 15-minute language chain for recall, spelling patterns, word shape, and cleanup decisions.
Number Sense
A quick chain for everyday estimates: percent, discount, conversion, time, and tip math.
What Cognitive Boost can and cannot do
Cognitive Boost scores are personal practice markers, not medical, psychological, educational, or diagnostic measurements.
Use this as short thinking practice, not as a measure of intelligence, health, or ability.
Cognitive Boost can help you practice attention, recall, estimation, planning, and reflection in short sessions.
It cannot diagnose memory problems, ADHD, dementia, anxiety, depression, learning disorders, or cognitive decline. A bad score may reflect fatigue, stress, distraction, unfamiliarity, or rushing. A good score does not prove that everything is fine.
Stop a session if it makes you anxious, frustrated, dizzy, visually strained, or more fatigued. If memory, attention, directions, money management, medication routines, work steps, or daily tasks are changing in real life, talk with a qualified health professional instead of using games to self-test.
Frequently asked questions
› Is this circuit a test?
No. It is a short practice routine. Scores are meant to help you notice patterns, not diagnose ability.
› How often should I repeat this circuit?
Most users should repeat a circuit 1-3 times per week or rotate through the weekly plan.
› What should I do if I get a low score?
Treat it as information. Fatigue, stress, rushing, distractions, and unfamiliar tasks can lower a score.
› Should I do the Light, Standard, or Deep Run?
Use Light when you are tired, Standard for daily practice, and Deep when you want a longer challenge.
› What if visual puzzles feel harder than word puzzles?
That is normal. Spatial practice uses different attention habits: scanning, comparing, rotating, and tracking. Slow accurate runs are better than rushed misses.