Getting a kid to read over the summer is a battle most parents don't win. The usual tactics, the book lists, the library trips, the "just try one chapter" negotiations, rarely work against a phone screen.
Teach Monster: Reading for Fun approaches the problem differently by putting reading tasks inside an RPG. It's one of the best book apps for grade schoolers to learn to love reading.
The reading doesn't feel like the point. The game does. And kids read because the quest requires it.
Download Teach Monster now:
Kids go through data faster than you think
Between educational apps, video calls, and streaming, kids on family plans can eat through shared data quickly. T-Mobile MVNOs offer the same 5G network coverage at a fraction of the cost, which means more data budget for everyone on the plan.
Here are the most popular options available right now:
What is Teach Monster: Reading for Fun?
Teach Monster: Reading for Fun is a role-playing game for grade schoolers that embeds reading comprehension tasks into an adventure storyline. You play as a new monster in a village where the library's books have been stolen, and recovering them requires completing quests.
Those quests involve reading recipes, instructions, signs, and short story excerpts to move the plot forward. The reading is the mechanic, not the subject. Teach Monster was developed by the same team behind Teach Your Monster to Read, which has won multiple BAFTA awards for educational game design.
Not sure how to update your apps?
Keeping your apps up to date ensures you're always getting the latest features, bug fixes, and security improvements. Learn how to update the apps on your iPhone and your Android. It takes less time than you think.
The game embeds reading into every quest
The village storyline gives kids a reason to care about what happens next, which makes reading the tasks feel like progress rather than homework. Characters communicate through speech bubbles, quest objectives are written out, and reading a recipe or set of instructions correctly advances the story.
The reading levels are simple enough for early grade schoolers but varied enough to stay interesting across different sessions.
Image: Jessica Santero | WhistleOut
The in-game library fills up as kids complete quests, which gives younger readers a visible sense of progress. Classic story excerpts appear throughout, which show kids well-known titles alongside the game's original content. For a child who already reads full sentences, the pacing keeps them engaged without feeling too easy or too demanding.
My honest assessment: It's more game than reading lesson
Teach Monster is genuinely engaging for kids, but it's worth being clear about what it does and doesn't do. The app is designed to make reading feel fun and worthwhile, not to teach a child how to read from the beginning.
Kids need a solid reading foundation going in. A child who can't yet read full sentences will hit a wall quickly, because the speech bubbles and quest text aren't narrated. Mom or Dad needs to be nearby for vocabulary questions.
Image: Jessica Santero | WhistleOut
There's also a real risk that a kid taps through screens and moves characters around without absorbing the text at all. The game mechanics are engaging enough that a child can make progress without reading carefully if no one is paying attention. Listening for your reader's voice as they sound out the text boxes is worth the extra few minutes of involvement.
Who Teach Monster is actually built for
Teach Monster works best for grade schoolers who already read full sentences and need something that makes books feel relevant and fun over the summer.
It's also a strong option for beginner English language learners who want an interactive, low-pressure way to practice reading comprehension in context. For that use case, the simple vocabulary, illustrated characters, and structured reading tasks make it more useful than a standard reading app aimed at native speakers.
How I tested Teach Monster
- Hands-on testing
Played through multiple quest stages, evaluating how reading tasks are integrated into the game mechanics and whether a child can progress without absorbing the text. - Reading level assessment
Evaluated vocabulary complexity, speech bubble readability, and the reading foundation required to use the app without significant adult support. - Engagement testing
Assessed how well the RPG structure sustains attention across multiple sessions and whether the reading tasks feel meaningful to the game progression.
Why you can trust WhistleOut
15+
years of mobile industry experience
900+
published wireless guides
35+
firsthand carrier reviews
We've been around since the birth of the iPhone. Along the way, we've learned how to spot the best deals for your wallet (and your sanity). We spend our days researching informative guides and writing insightful reviews on every kind of wireless plan, distinguishing what matters from what doesn't. We played around with these plans before recommending them, ensuring they're worth your hard-earned money.
Want to know more? Check out how we review every cell phone plan we rank.
Teach Monster FAQ
What age is Teach Monster: Reading for Fun for?
Teach Monster: Reading for Fun is best suited for children aged 5 to 8 who already have a reading foundation. It is not designed to teach a child to read from scratch, so kids who can't yet read full sentences will need significant adult support to use it.
Is Teach Monster free?
Yes, Teach Monster: Reading for Fun is free to download and includes substantial content at no cost. In-app purchases are available for additional content packs, but the base game provides enough content to evaluate whether it's right for your child before spending anything.
Is Teach Monster good for kids with dyslexia?
Teach Monster was not specifically designed for dyslexic readers, and it does not offer adjustable fonts or dyslexia-specific display settings. For children with dyslexia, Seriatim is a better-suited reading app with dedicated accessibility features.
Is Teach Monster good for English language learners?
Yes, Teach Monster is great for English learners. The simple vocabulary, illustrated characters, and structured reading tasks make Teach Monster a useful tool for beginner English language learners who want low-pressure reading practice in context, particularly at a grade school level.
Jessica Santero
Staff Writer