
Symmetry Studio
A line of symmetry is a fold line that pairs every point with a matching point the same perpendicular distance on the other side; a shape can have none, one, or several such lines.

What your child will figure out
- Predict and fold-check whether a proposed axis is a line of symmetry.
- Complete a mirror image by placing matching cells the same distance across an axis.
- Find and count every line of symmetry of familiar and generated shapes.
- Distinguish line symmetry from rotational symmetry in a novel shape.
The levels
- The butterfly fold
Predict the vertical fold, act on it, and observe every painted point meeting its partner.
- Finish the print
Complete a sparse half-painted tile design and fold-check the result.
- Turn the fold
Transfer the point-pair test from a vertical to a horizontal axis.
- Four-fold frame
Find all four symmetry lines of a square and explain that every point must pair across each line.
- The stretched square
Contrast a rectangle with a square and retain only its vertical and horizontal symmetry lines.
- Reflect the skyline
Complete a denser six-by-six mirror design across a horizontal axis.
- One-fold chevron
Prove that a shape can have exactly one symmetry line after testing four candidates.
- Zero is an answer
Reject every candidate line for an asymmetric shape instead of assuming a central line works.
- Diamond folds
Find two symmetry lines in a new orientation-rich shape without treating its sloping sides as axes.
- Diagonal print
Complete a seven-by-seven mirror image across a descending diagonal.
- Four-line transfer
Transfer the square's four-line structure to a decorated four-point star.
- The turning trick
Transfer the fold test to a parallelogram and distinguish zero line symmetries from half-turn rotational symmetry.
Ready when they are.
Play Symmetry Studio free — no account, no card.
Play Symmetry Studio free