Help & Guide

The full help content from the app, moved to the website in a readable format.

Kids Play Quest Help Center

Use the sections below to quickly understand how the app works for parents and kids.

Getting Started

Kids Play Quest helps families build habits, responsibility, discipline, and motivation using daily quests and rewards.

To begin:

1. Create your parent account.

2. Add your child in the Kids tab.

3. Set your household currency, point value, and Parent PIN in Settings.

4. Add rewards in the Rewards tab.

5. Start using quests daily.

Parent Mode

Parent Mode is where adults manage the family account.

You can:

  • Add or edit children
  • Approve completed quests
  • Add rewards
  • Create custom quests
  • Manage habits
  • Set Parent PIN
  • Change settings

Kid Mode

Kid Mode gives children a simple, focused experience.

Children can:

  • Choose rewards to unlock
  • View daily habits
  • View today's quests
  • Mark tasks as completed
  • See earned points and progress

Only parents can approve completions and manage settings.

How Daily Quests Work

The app automatically creates quests based on your child's age band, interests, and daily quest target.

Each day, children receive a fresh set of quests. This keeps the experience motivating while still matching the child's profile.

How Habits Work

Habits are repeating daily routines such as brushing teeth, making the bed, reading, or packing the school bag.

Parents can enable or disable habits for each child. Habit completions can help children build discipline over time while also contributing toward rewards.

How Rewards Work

Kids Play Quest is built on a simple idea: valuable things are earned through effort.

Instead of children getting everything immediately, the app helps parents turn rewards into growth tools. Children learn that effort leads to progress, consistency matters, patience is valuable, and habits help them move toward things they really want.

Examples:

  • If a child keeps asking for a toy or treat, the parent can turn that request into a reward goal.
  • If a child is spending too much time on mobile or TV, the parent can redirect that energy into quests that earn favourite things.
  • If a child is not disciplined, parents can use habit quests to build structure while helping the child work toward something meaningful.

Parents create, fund, approve, and fulfill all rewards. The app does not provide or finance rewards. It only provides the system that makes progress visible and motivating.

Currency & Point Value Settings

Parents control how fast or slow rewards are earned.

You choose the household currency and decide how much 1 point is worth in real money.

Important: a higher point value makes rewards unlock faster, because each point is worth more money.

Examples:

  • 1 point = ₹1 makes rewards slower and longer-term
  • 1 point = ₹5 gives medium-speed progress
  • 1 point = ₹10 makes rewards unlock faster

If a reward costs ₹300:

  • At 1 point = ₹1, the reward needs about 300 points
  • At 1 point = ₹5, the reward needs about 60 points
  • At 1 point = ₹10, the reward needs about 30 points

So if you want children to work longer for rewards, keep the point value lower. If you want rewards to feel easier and faster to earn, set a higher point value.

Built-in daily library quests currently award around 3, 5, or 8 points depending on difficulty.

Daily habit quests usually give smaller points because they are designed for consistency.

This flexibility lets each family choose what feels realistic, motivating, and affordable for their own home.

Approvals & Points

When a child taps “I did this!”, the quest moves to the Approve tab in Parent Mode.

The parent then reviews it. If approved, points are added. If not approved, the child does not receive points for that item.

This approval step is important because it keeps the system honest and trusted. Children cannot directly give themselves points.

Points are only added after parent approval, which means the progress bar reflects real completed effort.

Custom Quests

Custom quests let parents create family-specific goals that are not part of the default quest library.

Examples:

  • Clean study table
  • Help grandparents
  • Practice piano
  • Finish homework early

This makes the app useful for each family's real life, not just generic tasks. Parents can use custom quests to encourage discipline, kindness, learning, or responsibility based on the child's needs.

Tip: Create multiple custom quests for the same age group so the app can rotate them across days and keep daily quest selection fresh.

If you want a custom quest to be served only once, you can delete it after it has been served.

Team Quests

Team quests are shared quests that encourage siblings or children to complete an activity together.

Examples:

  • Clean the play room together
  • Build a puzzle together
  • Help set the dining table together

These quests are useful for teamwork, bonding, communication, and cooperation. They can turn group activities into positive shared wins.

Free vs Plus

Free and Plus plans may offer different limits and features.

Free plan may include:

  • Limits on number of kids
  • Limits on number of rewards
  • Banner ads in parent-facing areas

Plus plan may include:

  • More kids
  • More rewards
  • No ads
  • Expanded features

Use the plan that fits your family. The app should remain useful on free plan, while Plus gives more flexibility and room to grow.

Parent PIN

Parent PIN helps protect Parent Mode.

This prevents children from changing rewards, settings, or approval decisions without permission.

PIN cannot currently be recovered automatically, so please keep it safe.

Troubleshooting

Quests not changing? New settings may apply from the next day.

Points missing? Check whether the quest was approved.

Can't enter Parent Mode? Make sure the correct Parent PIN is being used.

If you forget your Parent PIN, contact customer support from your registered email for PIN reset help.

App issue? Restart the app and try again.

Safety Note

Kids Play Quest is a family motivation tool.

Parents remain responsible for supervising usage, rewards, and child participation.