AI is reshaping everything. The national curriculum won't catch up until your child is in secondary school. Ari teaches them now — through stories, games, and creative play.
First 100 families get 3 months free
By the time schools teach "AI literacy," your child will be competing with people who grew up using it. The children who learn to collaborate with AI now — to ask good questions, think critically about answers, and create with it — will have a decade's head start.
Ari isn't about replacing human skills. It's about adding a new one: the ability to work alongside AI as a creative partner.
Each path builds collaboration skills through play
Clear communication skills
Create simple games together
Collaborative artwork
Imagination meets AI
Compose and explore
Curious questions answered
First steps in programming
Numbers made friendly
Geography and culture
Ari is active, not passive. Your child creates, decides, and leads. It's closer to Lego than YouTube — they're building things, not watching things.
Ari runs in a closed environment designed for children. No open internet, no unfiltered AI responses. Every interaction is age-appropriate and logged for you to review.
They'll learn to ask better questions, explain their thinking clearly, and evaluate AI suggestions critically. These are skills they'll use for the rest of their lives — with or without AI.
She asked me 'Mum, why doesn't school have an Ari?' That told me everything I needed to know.
Mum of Isla, 6
He's learning to explain what he wants clearly. That's a life skill, not just an AI skill.
Dad of Oliver, 7
Finally, screen time I don't feel guilty about. She's actually making things, not just consuming.
Mum of Grace, 5
Your child doesn't have to wait.
First 100 families get 3 months free