Math Solitaire 24
by tapir
Math Solitaire 24
Tags for Math Solitaire 24
Description
Math Solitaire 24 is a brain game. In this game, you will be given 4 solitaire cards. Your goal is to get the value 24 by operating the 4 solitaire cards with addition, subtraction, multiplication and division. Each of the 4 solitaire cards must be used once and only once.
How to Play
First select 2 operands, then select an operator. You can click the selected operator to re-expand the operator list panel and select a new operator.
FAQ
What is Math Solitaire 24?
Math Solitaire 24 is a browser-based puzzle game developed by Tapir in which players use math operations to reach the number 24 using four given numbers.
How do you play Math Solitaire 24?
In Math Solitaire 24, you select and combine four provided numbers with mathematical operations like addition, subtraction, multiplication, or division to calculate exactly 24.
What are the main features of Math Solitaire 24?
Math Solitaire 24 features a solitaire-style math puzzle format, randomized number sets for each round, and a simple interface for immediate play in your browser.
Does Math Solitaire 24 have levels or progression systems?
Math Solitaire 24 does not use a traditional level or upgrade progression system; every puzzle is a new challenge focused purely on solving for 24.
What platform can you play Math Solitaire 24 on?
You can play Math Solitaire 24 directly in your web browser on platforms that support Kongregate, with no downloads required.
Comments
Yenarc
Mar. 23, 2009
4 Words: You can't count words.
Kurtisawesome0
May. 29, 2012
Awesome
frances_b
Aug. 31, 2010
Very nice and mathy. It would be nice if the order of the hands were shuffled. The solution to any given problem is too often directly derivable from the one before it because the hands are too similar. The term "turn" is a little confusing. I would use "hand" since that is clearer within your playing card metaphor.
CheshireHalli
May. 03, 2009
jai, that's to represent that you added two cards together.
jai151
Nov. 18, 2008
Not bad, though the unnecessary parentheses around some operators irks me. (1+1)+1 for example.