These are barely “games” I guess more like interesting practice I guess.
Put letter (or any known vowel teams) into three piles side by side. Put vowels in the middle. Put R in the first pile. T, m, s are good ones to put in the last pile. Read the resulting word, then take 1 card away at a time (or let the child take one card away each time) reading the new word real or nonsense each time. I think this is some of the best practice there is. So maybe you have /hem/ first then take the h away to reveal a c now child blends /cem/. This is different each time and really helped my readers.
If the child is not ready to blend 2 letters modify it to 2 ra, ba, ca, he….
It may also help to make simple alphabet cards that only have the lowercase letter on them and are in portrait orientation.
Put letter (later vowel teams and blends ect) cards up the stairs 1 card per step. Child sounds them as you walk up the stairs together. You can do the same thing with words by writing words the child can sound out (sam, cat, ham…)on index cards.
Take the above mentioned letter, blend, word….cards and scatter them on the floor. Stamp on them, wack them with a fly swatter, make them into a road and drive a car down it or turn them into lilly pads and hop from 1 to another. This path or road is even more fun if a mini marshmellow or 2 are at the end.
Write words on a white board or in sand or shaving cream for the child to sound out and erase.
Have the child “Write” words with alphabet magnets or wooden alphabets. Have the child write words (once he or she can form letters) in sand or shaving cream.
Don potter has some alphabet and word cards that correlate with word mastry which foundational phonics is based on
http://www.donpotter.net/education_pages/WordMastery.html
I also highly recomend at least the first 4 books from American Language Series readers. Fun in the Sun, Scamp and Tramp, Soft and White, and On the Farm. https://www.rainbowresource.com/category/6704/American-Language-Series.html
I also have some of the montessori “pink series” words and pictures to match. I like these as well. It is more independent which is great with 4 other kids.
I hope some of these are helpful….most are not original with me;)