Safe for Kids • No Chat • Free

Artbitrator
for Kids

A free AI drawing game where kids draw and an encouraging AI voice responds in real-time. No player chat. No strangers. Just drawing and feedback.

Choose Bob Ross mode for gentle encouragement while they draw.

No Player Chat
100% Free
AI Voice Feedback
Ages 5+
For Parents & Teachers

Why Parents Choose Artbitrator

Most online drawing games have open text chat where strangers type anything. Artbitrator doesn't.

No Player Chat

There is no text chat between players. Children cannot send or receive messages from other players. The only voice in the game is the AI judge.

AI Judges Only

Drawings are evaluated by AI, not by other players. No player voting means no one can make unkind comments about a child's work.

Family-Friendly AI Voices

Every AI judge personality is designed to be encouraging and appropriate. Bob Ross mode is warm and gentle. All commentary is suitable for young children.

No Downloads, No Accounts

Runs in any web browser. No app to install, no email signup required, no personal information collected to play. Open a link and start drawing.

How the AI Feedback Works

Your child draws. The AI watches every stroke and talks about what it sees — out loud, in real time.

1

Your child starts drawing

Pick a prompt from the game or just free draw. No timer in Free Draw mode — they go at their own pace.

2

The AI responds while they draw

Within seconds, the AI starts speaking. It guesses what's being drawn, reacts to new strokes, and encourages progress. In Bob Ross mode, this sounds like warm, gentle narration.

"Oh, I can see some lovely shapes forming there... is that going to be a house? The roof is looking wonderful! Keep going, friend."

3

Kids adjust, laugh, and keep drawing

When the AI guesses wrong, it's funny. When it guesses right, it's satisfying. Either way, children stay engaged because something is paying attention to their work. That feedback loop — draw, hear a reaction, adjust — is how drawing practice actually sticks.

Three Modes That Work for Kids

Same game, different entry points depending on what your child needs.

Start Here

Free Draw / Learn

No timer, no competition, no pressure. Kids draw whatever they want while the AI watches and responds with encouraging spoken feedback. The best mode for building confidence.

150 Levels

Singleplayer Challenge

A structured campaign with 150 prompts across themed levels. Kids progress at their own pace, earning stars as they go. Great for goal-oriented children who like unlocking things.

1-12 Players

Multiplayer Madness

Everyone draws the same prompt at the same time — siblings, classmates, the whole family. No turns, no waiting. The AI judges all drawings simultaneously with live voice commentary.

For Teachers

Use It in the Classroom

Setup takes 30 seconds. Open Artbitrator, create a multiplayer room, share the join code or link with your class. Students open it on any device — Chromebooks, iPads, phones. No accounts, no app installs, no IT department involvement.

Everyone draws at once. Unlike turn-based games where 29 kids watch while one draws, every student draws the same prompt simultaneously. The AI judges all of them in real time. No idle hands.

No moderation needed. There's no text chat for students to misuse. The AI provides all feedback. You can focus on teaching rather than policing a chat window.

Ideas for classroom use:

  • * 5-minute warm-up before art class — gets kids drawing without overthinking
  • * Vocabulary reinforcement — draw the word you just learned
  • * Visual thinking exercises — "Why did the AI think your bird was a helicopter?"
  • * Reward time — end-of-week multiplayer session as a class activity

How It Compares

An honest look at what's different for kids.

Feature Skribbl / Drawasaurus Google Quick Draw Artbitrator
Player Chat Open text chat N/A (solo) None — AI only
Voice Feedback No No Yes — real-time
Encouragement From other players (unpredictable) "I guessed it" / "I didn't" Bob Ross mode — spoken
Turn-Based? Yes — lots of waiting Solo only No — everyone draws at once
Practice Mode No No Free Draw — zero pressure
Cost Free Free Free

Questions from Parents & Teachers

What age is Artbitrator suitable for?

Artbitrator works for ages 5 and up. Younger children (5-7) do best in Free Draw mode where there's no timer or competition. Older kids (8+) enjoy the Singleplayer Challenge and Multiplayer modes. The AI voices are encouraging and appropriate for all ages.

Is there any chat or messaging between players?

No. There is no text chat, voice chat, or messaging between players. The only voice in the game comes from the AI judge personalities. Children cannot communicate with other players through the game.

Is it really free?

Yes, completely free. No trial period, no premium tier, no in-app purchases. Open a browser, start playing.

Can I use this in a classroom?

Absolutely. Teachers create a multiplayer room, share the join link with students, and everyone draws simultaneously. No accounts needed, works on school Chromebooks and tablets, and the AI judges mean no moderation is required. A 5-minute Free Draw warm-up before art class works particularly well.

What devices does it work on?

Any device with a web browser — laptops, Chromebooks, tablets, iPads, and phones. No app download needed. Touch screens and mouse/trackpad both work well for drawing.

What is Bob Ross mode?

Bob Ross is one of the AI judge personalities. When selected, the AI provides gentle, encouraging voice commentary while your child draws — similar to the real Bob Ross's calm, positive style. It says things like "Those are some happy little trees forming there" and "I love what you're building." It's the recommended judge for younger or less confident children.

Can my child play alone?

Yes. Free Draw mode and the Singleplayer Challenge are both solo experiences. The AI provides voice feedback even with a single player, so your child always has a responsive audience for their drawings.

Does the AI grade or score drawings harshly?

No. The AI responds with curiosity and encouragement, not criticism. It tries to guess what's being drawn and reacts positively regardless of skill level. When it guesses wrong, it's usually funny rather than discouraging — kids often laugh when the AI mistakes their cat for a helicopter.

Let Them Draw

Free. No downloads. No accounts. No chat. Just a canvas, an AI voice that pays attention, and a child who gets to hear that their drawing matters.

Start Free Draw Now