A game for elementary students. Learners answer short, game-style questions to earn chances to collect Labubus and then face off in a final judged showdown. Start with phonics or punctuation today and plug in new skill sets as you grow.
Inspired by my student Mia – thank you for the idea!
Pick a skill in the Phonics or practice mechanics in Spelling/Writing. More skill collections will be added over time.
Build decoding and fluency with focused reading skills.
Skill Focus
Choose a grade level to practice distinguishing facts from opinions.
You
Computer
A Labubu-themed learning game for roughly Grades 1–4. Students answer short, skill-focused questions (phonics, punctuation, and more over time) to earn chances to pick Labubus and then face off in a final judged showdown.
Swap in different skill sets without changing the game flow—phonics, punctuation, and future reading or language goals can all live inside the same Labubu experience.
Each round uses bite-sized passages or sentences so readers can focus on decoding, understanding, or editing without getting overwhelmed.
Every correct answer unlocks a chance to let the Labubu Scanner decide who picks first and add a new Labubu to the collection—students actually care how their “team” looks at the end.
Clean layouts, grouped skills, and decodable text make it a friendly companion for OG/Wilson-style small groups, intervention, and home practice.
Runs right in the browser on Chromebooks, iPads, laptops, and desktops—perfect for centers, tutoring, or at-home review when you need something engaging fast.
Ideal for roughly Grades 1–4 learners working on early literacy, decoding, light comprehension, and sentence-level writing skills. Great for small-group intervention, 1:1 tutoring, homework links, and literacy centers that need more fun and less resistance.
Yes. You can play all included skill sets for free right on the ABZ Learning website.
Yes. It runs in any modern browser on iPad, Chromebook, Mac, and Windows devices—no downloads needed.
Use it as a warm-up, center, intervention block, or take-home link. Pair it with your own observation notes, checklists, or ABZ data tools to track which skills students still need.