Brain Games that Really Work

Researchers know more than ever about how puzzles and twisters keep your mind sharp (Hint: Start with games that are tough!)

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Researchers know more than ever about how puzzles and twisters keep your mind sharp (Hint: Start with games that are tough!)

Tonya Brigham could never resist a good sudoku—or any sudoku. A 50-year-old smoothie-store owner and mother of two, from a suburb of Washington, DC, Brigham wrestled with the puzzles while waiting in lines, and raced to solve them in record time using strategies plucked from YouTube videos. “If it’s a 30-minute puzzle, I try to figure it out in 12,” she says. “Sudoku lets me challenge myself, take a breather, and then go back into the world’s chaos.”

After several years of sudoku­mania, Brigham noticed something unexpected: Her brain seemed sharper and more focused. “I didn’t have much, if any, brain fog during menopause,” she says. At her Smoothie King shop in Bowie, Maryland, she found she could easily put together employee work schedules in her head. “A lot of stores use an electronic scheduling tool, but I have all the data in my mind,” she says. “I can very quickly see the holes and how to fill them. It’s the same with inventory. I think I have that capacity because of the game.”

We call them games, but for many people, brainteasers and challenging puzzles are serious business. Tom Brady credits his seven Super Bowl champion­ships in part to high-tech brain-training games he performs on an app called BrainHQ. Queen Elizabeth keeps a crossword puzzle stashed in her royal handbag. Half the midlife and older adults in a 2019 University of Michigan survey said they play mentally challenging games to maintain or boost memory.

The games do seem to work. In one 2020 study, researchers at the University of Edin­burgh found that 1,091 women and men who frequently played cards, bingo, or chess or did crossword puzzles had sharper thinking and memory skills—­equivalent to an IQ up to 5.6 points higher—than those who rarely did. The study doesn’t prove that the puzzles directly led to the higher IQs, but it does show that ev...

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