Axira uses short, child-friendly game missions to help you see how your child adapts to change, recovers from mistakes, and keeps trying when things get harder.
They struggle because the rule changed, the mistake felt too big, or the challenge got hard too fast. Report cards show outcomes. Axira helps you see the moments behind them.
How does your child respond when the rules suddenly shift — do they notice quickly, or hold on to the old pattern for a while?
After a stumble or a tricky stretch, how quickly does your child find their rhythm again and keep going?
When things speed up and get harder, does your child push on, pace themselves, or choose a stopping point?
Your child helps friendly portal pets find their way home in a short game session — about 10 minutes, all positive feedback, never a score in sight.
Your child guides glowing creatures through magic portals. The portal's rule changes during the quest — sometimes announced, sometimes a surprise to discover.
Behind the scenes, the game gently observes how your child adapts to rule changes, recovers after mistakes, and keeps going as the challenge grows.
You receive a plain-language summary of what happened in the session — strengths first, with one simple thing to try at home for each pattern.
Axira is being built by a founder who believes child products should earn trust before they ask for it. So here is exactly what Axira is — and isn't.
Patterns from play, described in plain language. Strengths-based observations from a single session at a time. One practical, gentle thing to try at home.
Scores, rankings, or labels for your child. Diagnoses of any kind. Comparisons to other children. Negative language — in the game or in your summary.
We're inviting a small group of founding families to shape Axira from the beginning — early access, direct input, and founding-family pricing locked for life.