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Table of Contents

  • Introduction
  • What Working Memory Is
  • Why Working Memory Matters Beyond Games
  • Which Daily Games Target Working Memory
  • What the Research Says About Training It
  • Dedicated Drills and Their Limits
  • Testing Versus Training
  • How Daily Tracks Your Working Memory Score
  • Practical Takeaways
  • The Bottom Line
  • Sources
All Stories
Published June 14, 2025

Working Memory and Puzzle Games: What Research Actually Shows

By DailyEditorial Team

A clear-eyed look at the science of working memory, which Daily games target it, and what the evidence says about training it.

Introduction

Working memory is among the most studied ideas in all of cognitive science, and one of the most oversold in app marketing. It has been tied to academic achievement, reading comprehension, professional decision-making, and even emotional control. It is also the function brain-training products most love to promise they will improve. The reality is more careful than the advertising. Here is what working memory actually is, which Daily games lean on it, and what the evidence really says about training it.

What Working Memory Is

Working memory is the system that holds and manipulates a small amount of information in real time. It is distinct from long-term memory, which stores knowledge for the long haul; working memory is the mental scratchpad you use right now. The most influential account, Baddeley's model, breaks it into a phonological loop for verbal material, a visuospatial sketchpad for visual and spatial material, and a central executive that steers attention between them. Holding a phone number in mind while you cross the room, tracking several moving objects at once, or keeping a running subtotal while you solve a problem all draw on working memory.

Why Working Memory Matters Beyond Games

Working memory capacity is one of the strongest correlates of fluid intelligence, the ability to reason through and solve novel problems. People with more of it tend to handle complex reasoning, follow multi-step instructions, and juggle competing demands more reliably. At work it supports decisions that require holding several variables in mind at once; in school it is closely tied to reading comprehension and mathematical reasoning. Keeping it engaged is one of the more practical things you can do for everyday cognitive performance.

Which Daily Games Target Working Memory

Two of Daily's six games carry a formal working memory weighting. Coin Maze attributes 30 percent of its cognitive load to working memory, because you have to track your own position, the chaser's position, the coin locations, and the maze layout at the same time, across three stages that grow more tangled as you go. Money Tycoon attributes 20 percent, asking you to hold your current balance, upcoming upgrade costs, and your passive income rate in mind while making a sequence of purchase decisions across thirty in-game days. The other four games still use working memory informally, but these two lean on it the hardest.

What the Research Says About Training It

Here the evidence is more sobering than most app marketing admits. Training on a working memory task reliably makes you better at that task and at very similar ones, a result called near transfer. Far transfer, where the practice spills over into unrelated abilities like general reasoning or school performance, is the disputed part. A widely cited meta-analytic review by Melby-Lervag and Hulme found reliable short-term gains on trained tasks but no convincing evidence those gains generalized to other skills. We walk through this debate in more depth in our look at whether brain games actually make you smarter.

Dedicated Drills and Their Limits

The best known working memory drill is dual n-back, a demanding task researchers once hoped would raise fluid intelligence. That hope has not held up cleanly; results are mixed and the strongest effects stay close to the trained task. We compare that approach with everyday puzzle play in dual n-back versus daily puzzles. The practical lesson is the same either way: expect to get better at what you practice and at near neighbors, and stay skeptical of promises about sweeping, general gains.

Testing Versus Training

Most brain game marketing blurs a real distinction: measuring working memory is not the same as improving it. When you play Coin Maze, Daily is measuring your working memory performance against the global field, and that measurement is genuine and informative. Whether the same session also trains your underlying capacity is a separate, harder question. The honest summary is that regular, effortful engagement with demanding tasks is associated with maintained cognition, especially with age, but whether the credit belongs to a specific puzzle or simply to staying mentally active is still being worked out.

How Daily Tracks Your Working Memory Score

Daily's six dimension cognitive radar updates every time you finish a game with a working memory weighting. Because Coin Maze carries 30 percent and Money Tycoon 20 percent, playing both daily gives the system steady data on this dimension. A rising score reflects improving performance on those specific working-memory-weighted tasks relative to other players, and your World Rankings percentile shows how that compares with everyone solving the same boards. It is a legitimate signal, not a clinical assessment, and it is most useful read as a trend.

Practical Takeaways

If lifting your working memory dimension is the goal, finish Coin Maze and Money Tycoon every day instead of skipping them when they feel hard, because difficulty is exactly the sign the system is being stretched. Beyond Daily, the better-supported levers for working memory are unglamorous: regular aerobic exercise, enough sleep, and cutting down on heavy multitasking. Use Daily as a consistent way to measure and engage the skill, pair it with that basic cognitive hygiene, and read your score as an informative trend rather than a verdict.

The Bottom Line

Working memory is worth taking seriously whether you are a student, a professional, or simply someone who wants to stay sharp. Daily's working-memory-weighted games are a genuine and enjoyable way to engage it. Play them daily, keep honest expectations about what any puzzle can and cannot do, and you have an approach to cognitive maintenance that is both evidence-informed and actually fun.

Sources

Melby-Lervag, M., and Hulme, C. (2013), Is working memory training effective? A meta-analytic review, Developmental Psychology.

Simons, D. J., et al. (2016), Do brain-training programs work?, Psychological Science in the Public Interest.

Wikipedia, Working memory.