Factor Samurai - Multiply and Divide your way to Times Tables Mastery
OS :
Version :1.74
Size :132.82Mb
Updated :Mar 4,2016
Developer :Third Rail, LLC
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Here are three topics that gamers often discuss online, in the form of questions: 1. What strategy do you use to overcome the challenging math problems in Factor Samurai? 2. How do you manage your math skills and mental fatigue during extended gameplay sessions? 3. What do you think is the perfect balance between math difficulty and rewards in Factor Samurai?
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Pros and Cons from users' feedback
Based on the users' reviews of the Factor Samurai app, here are three cons and pros: **Cons:** 1. "Lack of variety in level designs, gets repetitive after a while." (15 words) 2. "Some math problems are too easy, others too difficult, uneven difficulty curve." (15 words) 3. "App occasionally crashes or freezes, frustrating experience." (15 words) **Pros:** 1. "Engaging way to practice multiplication and division skills, great for kids." (15 words) 2. "Fun and clever concept, keeps children entertained while learning." (15 words) 3. "App tracks progress, provides rewards and incentives to motivate learning." (15 words)
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Description
Winner Corona App of the Week! Factor samurai is a great way to learn times tables. You play as the samurai whose sacred duty is to cut all the numbers down to their prime factors. You will be thrown one number after the next, cut them up if they can be factored into smaller values, if not, if they are prime, do not cut them. Prime numbers are numbers that cannot be divided into small whole numbers. Two, three, five, seven, eleven, and thirteen are all examples of prime numbers. Four is not prime because it can be broken down in the whole numbers two times two. Factor Samurai will reinforce the arithmetic principles of multiplication and division by continually challenging the player to remember which numbers can be factored into smaller values, and which ones can't. As the player slices numbers into factors, those factors can be broken down further, until they are split into their prime factors. Knowing that 63 is 3 times 3 times 7 or that 128 is 2 raised to the seventh power (7 twos!) is how you become a true Factor Samurai! Factor Samurai is used extensively in the classroom. More than half of the recorded downloads are to public schools.
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