About Spanish Flagle — the 21 Spanish-speaking countries
Spanish Flagle is a free, no-ads, no-login geography game for young children. We show one flag at the top of the screen — a flag from one of the 21 Spanish-speaking countries — with three pictures underneath. Each picture is a famous landmark, a famous food, a famous person, or a map showing where a country is. Your child taps the picture that comes from the flag’s country. Get it right and a friendly pop-up explains what they found, before the next flag appears.
It’s a sister game to Flagle, but where Flagle shows a picture and asks for the flag, Spanish Flagle shows the flag and asks for the picture — and it stays inside the Spanish-speaking world, from Spain and Mexico to Argentina, Peru and Equatorial Guinea.
The 21 Spanish-speaking countries
Spanish is an official language in 21 countries across three continents. Spanish Flagle covers all of them:
- Europe: Spain.
- Africa: Equatorial Guinea.
- North & Central America: Mexico, Guatemala, Honduras, El Salvador, Nicaragua, Costa Rica, Panama.
- Caribbean: Cuba, Dominican Republic, Puerto Rico.
- South America: Colombia, Venezuela, Ecuador, Peru, Bolivia, Paraguay, Chile, Argentina, Uruguay.
How it works
- A flag sits at the top — for example the red-and-yellow flag of Spain.
- Three pictures appear below: a landmark, a dish, a famous face or a map — from three different Spanish-speaking countries.
- Your child taps the picture that belongs to the flag’s country — paella, the Sagrada Família, Rafael Nadal or a map of Spain.
- Right answer? The tile flashes green, a star is added, and a pop-up explains what it is — a sentence a five-year-old can understand — before the next flag.
- Wrong answer? The tile wobbles red and is crossed out, but the flag stays put and they can try again. No losing.
It gets harder as you go
Spanish Flagle starts with the eight most familiar countries (Spain, Mexico, Argentina, Peru, Chile, Colombia, Cuba, Costa Rica) and unlocks more as your child earns stars — first Venezuela, Ecuador, Bolivia, Uruguay, Guatemala, Panama and the Dominican Republic, then the trickier ones: Paraguay, Honduras, Nicaragua, El Salvador, Puerto Rico and Equatorial Guinea. Each new tier comes with a little celebration. Stars only go up.
Because every country can appear as a landmark, a food, a person or a map, the same flag rarely shows the same picture twice — and recently-seen flags are held back so answers don’t repeat.
How to play with your child
- Say the country aloud. “That’s the flag of Mexico. A taco is from Mexico!”
- Read the pop-up together. When they get one right, the little fact box tells you both something new — read it out.
- Spot the flag colours. Lots of these flags share red, white and blue — noticing the differences is real geography.
- Five minutes a day. Short and warm beats long and earnest.
Frequently asked questions
Is Spanish Flagle free?
Yes. Yes. No ads, no data selling, and a generous free puzzle every day. Premium unlocks all our games — £2.99/month, £19.99/year, or a one-off £19.99 Founding Frog membership. No data collection beyond anonymous page analytics.
Can my child fail?
No. There is no timer, no lives and no fail state. A wrong tap gives a gentle wobble — the flag stays and they try again. Stars only go up.
Does my child need to read?
No. The flag is the question and the pictures are the answers. The country name and the fact pop-up are there for the grown-up to read aloud, but a pre-reader can play entirely by matching flags to pictures.
Does it work offline?
Yes once the page has loaded. Add it to your home screen for an app-like experience.
More from Tadpole Games
- Flagle — the original: a famous landmark in the middle, flags around it, tap the country that matches.
- Spanish Words — tap the flag to hear a Spanish word, then tap the matching picture.
- Fredle — a daily phonics word puzzle.
Photo credits
All photographs and maps are from Wikimedia Commons and Wikipedia, used under Creative Commons (CC BY / CC BY-SA / CC0) or public-domain terms. Landmark, food, person and map images are credited individually in landmarks/_credits.json, food/_credits.json, people/_credits.json and maps/_credits.json. The locator globes are orthographic-projection maps from Wikimedia Commons.