Montessori Preschool — the materials are Montessori, the coin economy and auto-correct are not
Edoki Academy (France). iOS, Android, Fire, Apple TV. Free + subscription ($9.99/mo or $59.99/yr). Real curriculum on authentic Montessori material; the Montessori fidelity is half-marketing; a sticky-cancel subscription stack.
Edoki Academy (French studio; "designed by certified Montessori teachers"). App Store 4+, recommended 3–7. 4.5 / 5 across 4.6K ratings, v6.1. Free with subscription ($9.99/mo or $59.99/yr; reviewers report ~$65/yr). The number work uses authentic Montessori golden beads (place value) and the literacy ladder is phonics-sequenced sounds-before-names — real skill practice. But the coin/avatar reward economy and the auto-correction both break Montessori fidelity (Common Sense Media: rewards are "not typically Montessori"), and the trial-to-subscription path draws a consistent dark-pattern complaint set. CSM privacy rating: "Warning".
How we got to 68
Safety < 60 — flagged for parental discretion.
The Play Score is a weighted average: Fun ×0.25, Learning ×0.3, Safety ×0.25, Value ×0.2. Anything below 60 on Safety caps the total at 70.
What parents wrote vs. what their kids did
Quotes are sourced from public App Store, Google Play, and Reddit reviews captured during research. Reviewer handles shown verbatim where the platform makes them public; we never invent quotes or named children.
""It's fully educational and yet it keeps his engagement. It has enough parental control option and with apple's guided access mode it works perfectly for our 3 yr old… without all the bright colors and annoying / super rewarding sounds.""
Ryguy608, Apple App Store US (5★, "Absolutely love it")· App Store""I thought this would be a good jump on pre-school because it was Montessori. Bad idea! Way too colorful with too much addictive pecking for a child, even if the themes and design are thoughtful." Reports the "constant demand followed by melt downs" that ended their use."
RedValkyrieEcho, Apple App Store US (2★, "Addictive Pecking")· App Store"Translated from French: "With Montessori the child must have the chance to make mistakes and to be allowed to self-correct; if the app corrects in the child's place, he learns nothing." (Orig.: "…si l'app corrige à la place de l'enfant, il apprend rien.")"
clo97111, Apple App Store FR (3★, original French — faithful translation)· App Store""Received the 'free trial' for $10 on the spot instead of when the trial ends… I didn't even get to see if it's a game my kids wanted to play before it charged me so here I am stuck with it for a month.""
giantsfreak626, Apple App Store US (3★, "Not a free trial")· App Store""My toddler loves this and it stays applicable for years.""
MamaBear213, Apple App Store US (5★, "Wonderful App")· App StoreWhat's good, what's not
- ✓Number work uses authentic Montessori material. Hoot Reading: "the golden beads to count in thousands." Golden beads map one-to-one correspondence onto base-ten place value — the concrete referent preoperational number sense needs before the abstract symbol.
- ✓Literacy ladder is phonics-sequenced, not just phonics-aware. Sounds before names is the authentic Montessori order — phonemic awareness first, the letter name later. Tracing adds a fine-motor anchor. App Store: covers "phonics, reading, writing, numbers… and even coding".
- ✓Broad, genuinely educational scope confirmed by an independent expert org. The Good Play Guide (recommended age 3–7): "each activity is uniquely crafted with Montessori principles, fostering problem-solving, experimentation, and creativity."
- ✓Long-tenure repeat-play signal from parents — the mark of a deep curriculum, not a one-session toy. App Store 5★ (MamaBear213): "my toddler loves this and it stays applicable for years"; (HD{:): "best kids app I've found. There's soo much content!"
- ✓No advertising, and a calmer stimulation profile than most edutainment when used with parental controls. App Store 5★ (Ryguy608): "it keeps his engagement… without all the bright colors and annoying / super rewarding sounds." Hoot Reading confirms no in-app advertising.
- ✓Works offline and across many devices and languages — usable on a plane or in a car. App Store listing: 7 languages, iOS / iPadOS / Android / Apple TV / Fire. The breadth is real even if the "#1 Montessori app worldwide" superlative is the marketing copy.
- —CONTRARIAN: the coin reward economy breaks Montessori's principle of intrinsic motivation. Common Sense Media is blunt — kids "earn coins to decorate their avatar and classroom", which "is not typically Montessori". A token economy is marketing, not Montessori method.
- —Auto-correction glosses over control of error — the load-bearing Montessori mechanism. App Store FR 3★ (clo97111, translated): "with Montessori the child must have the chance to make mistakes and self-correct; if the app corrects in the child's place, he learns nothing."
- —Stimulation profile splits households. A parent who came specifically for Montessori (2★): "way too colorful with too much addictive pecking for a child, even if the themes and design are thoughtful," ending in "constant demand followed by melt downs."
- —The "Montessori" claim is contested by users on contact. App Store 1★ (MB6914, "Not Montessori"): "opened it and tried a game. Sad to say the game is definitely not Montessori-based. Had a giant's foot appear and a dragon."
- —Subscription dark-pattern stack. App Store 3★ (giantsfreak626): "received the 'free trial' for $10 on the spot instead of when the trial ends"; 2★ (augustina2022): "I have never had so much trouble trying to unsubscribe with anything before." CSM privacy rating: "Warning".
- —Value is dented by a recurring ~$60/yr price against free comparable curricula, and even fans flag the paywall. App Store 4★ (Yo rizz): "you have to subscribe… how come you need to pay for Education?!" Listing price: $9.99/mo or $59.99/yr.
What your kid is actually practising
The "tracing letters and numbers" step adds a real fine-motor demand that anchors the grapheme in the hand, not just the eye. It is a genuine pre-writing practice, though a screen stylus-or-finger trace is a weaker proprioceptive anchor than sandpaper letters in the physical Montessori material.
Phonics-sequenced, not just phonics-aware: the ladder runs "letter sounds, letter names" in that order, the authentic Montessori sequence that targets phonemic awareness (the sound /m/) before the abstract letter name. Most app-store ABC products invert this into name-recognition flashcards.
The number work sits on golden beads — a unit bead, ten-bar, hundred-square, thousand-cube — mapping one-to-one correspondence onto the base-ten place-value system. That is the concrete referent preoperational number sense is built on before it can move to the symbol. Hoot Reading: "the golden beads to count in thousands… up to counting to 10,000."
Self-direction across a large activity map is the executive-function claim, but the dossier flags a real limit: "the large number of activities may require some adult guidance in navigation," and the auto-correct removes the self-correction loop that would otherwise build planning and self-monitoring. The skill is partly window dressing without a co-piloting adult.
The "code and logic" and "practical life" activities target sequencing and problem-solving. The Good Play Guide (expert): "each activity is uniquely crafted with Montessori principles, fostering problem-solving, experimentation, and creativity" — though the auto-correction caps how much independent problem-solving the child actually does.