Math Trainer
by GoldenTechNinja
Math Trainer
Tags for Math Trainer
Description
Learn the fastest methods for mental arithmetic and beat the calculator on time! Sharpen your math skills in 7 different topics from the basic operations such as addition and subtraction to exponentional notation and modulo.
How to Play
You can find methods for mental arithmetic under the "Learn" tab. Click "Train" to get training problems. You can learn more about the options for the training problems under "Instructions" in the game.
The goal of the game is to achieve the "Mathemagician" title by reaching a total level of 200.
Comments
sopus5
Jul. 04, 2013
i love this game!!! i really like the idea about levels
i think it would be a good idea for the game to be online so that you can play against others i speed, and if you won you could get 100+ exp
as a prize.
Thank you for your feedback! I agree with you. Online competition would be much fun, but I doubt enough people will join. Because of this I added the "Best <5s" highscore as a speed achievement.
c0mput3rg33k
Jun. 04, 2016
dear math, I am not a therapist! Solve your own problems!
strit5
Jul. 04, 2013
Play this game in the school... Your teacher wont get angry
CloudHill
Jul. 04, 2013
Also, the fraction thing simplifies anything over 0 to 1 over 0. Maybe you could change the lower bound minimum to 1. Or if you want to include negatives at least disable 0 when randomizing the denominator.
2/0 is equal to 1/0 and x/0 is equal x inifinitive or +/- inifinitive, but I understand that the problems aren't interesting and very confusing too, so I change it. 0 can't be either the denominator or the numerator from now on.
CloudHill
Jul. 04, 2013
Best under 5 is somewhat pointless, as you can set the problem count high and the range from 0 to 0, and the time is counted per problem, so every problem can be completed at under 1s for a total of 0s; I thought it would be best if I demonstrated my point. In all this was actually kind of interesting. Throw an interesting GUI on it and market the game. I know it would be a nice warmup before going into accounting. 7^3 is 343, had to think about it the first time, but I've memorized it now. 8^3 is 512, 9^3 is 729, etc. So yeah.
Okay, I will apply the 25% percent rule for the numbers' size values for both achievements. Thank you for your feedback. It's great to hear that you can use the techniques.