
Capital Quest
Capital letters signal the beginning of a sentence and the special names of people, places, days, months, and titles; ordinary words stay lowercase.

What your child will figure out
- Predict which words in a sentence need capitals before testing the repair.
- Distinguish sentence starts and the pronoun I from proper nouns.
- Explain why names, places, days, months, and titles take capitals.
- Transfer multiword place names, titles before names, and earlier capitalization rules to longer generated questions, dialogue, routes, and mixed-clause sentences.
The levels
- The first lock
Predict, repair, observe, and explain the capital at a sentence start.
- The lone I rune
Contrast a sentence start with the pronoun I, which stays capital wherever it appears.
- A hero's name
Repair a sentence start and a person's name, then explain why the name is special.
- Two heroes arrive
Distinguish two people's names from an ordinary people noun in the same sentence.
- The map lock
Distinguish a named place from an ordinary place noun.
- The double-name bridge
Recognize that every word in a multiword place name needs a capital.
- The weekday wheel
Connect day names to the same special-name principle used for people and places.
- The month moon
Distinguish a month name from ordinary season and time words.
- The captain's seal
Capitalize a title when it comes directly before a person's name.
- The calendar crossing
Combine person, place, day, and month rules in one journey sentence.
- The messenger's report
Carry name and pronoun-I rules through punctuation and a second clause.
- The royal invitation
Transfer every unlocked rule to a title, person, multiword place, day, month, and pronoun I.
Ready when they are.
Play Capital Quest free — no account, no card.
Play Capital Quest free