Description
- : Provides a fun alternative to math workbooks to help kids practice math facts.
- : Different levels of play on each card. Star ranking at top of card indicates general difficulty level to further tailor game to players' skills.
- : Also great for the classroom or homeschool math class. Multiple ways to play, including competitively, collaboratively, individually, or online.
- : Little Ones recommended for 4+. Fun Ones for 6+. Wild Ones and Classic recommended for 9+. Perfect educational travel game for families with kids of different ages.
- : Each game includes 52 double-sided cards containing as many as 416 unique challenges (1,456 total across all four games). Durable card game made in Michigan.
Adsumudi is the monstrously fun card game for kids to practice their mental math skills. Find the secret math path to Adsumudis answer on each card by adding, subtracting, multiplying, and dividing the five other numbers. Winner of the Academic's Choice Brain Toy award, there are multiple ways to play Adsumudi to accommodate different levels or simply to keep things interesting! Each card has at least one solution for each level (easy, medium, hard, monstrously hard), but there are many ways to find Adsumudis answer. Adsumudi is a favorite among math teachers and parents alike, perfect for family game nights and the classroom, including homeschool. Adsumudi Fun Ones plays exactly like classic Adsumudi but features cards with smaller numbers (only 1 - 12) and is playable with just + and (advanced players can still use and ). It provides an ultra fun, fast-paced challengeand allows younger players to join in, too. Adsumudi Little Ones plays exactly like classic Adsumudi, but features cards with smaller numbers that can be solved using only + and - (knowledge of and not required). Fun and accessible for children of all ages. Adsumudi Wild Ones features all new cards with the classic Adsumudi challenges you know and love, plus 4 new types of cards: Fractions, Decimals, BIG Numbers, and Money. Psst! Can you figure out how Adsumudi got its name? Hint: it has to do with ADdition, SUbtraction, MUltiplication, and DIvision!