Professor Kageyama’s MATHS TRAINING


We have come to rely on calculators and computers to such an extent that our basic mathematical skills fall victim to stagnation.

Along the lines of the groundbreaking Brain Training and Eye Training games on the DS, Prof. Kageyama’s Hundred Cell Calculation method is the arithmetic learning system used in Japanese classrooms. Re-learn what you thought was left on the classroom floor when you left school, refresh your mind if you’re still a scholar, and invigorate your mathematical brain with these well-developed daily exercises making these essential skills a fun experience (as opposed to the pain I remember from school).

The DS stylus allows you to write the answers on the touch-screen, designed to accommodate both the right- and left handed – but remember to write visible enough to ensure it not coming up as an error or a different digit to the one you intended. You can track your progress and even link up to over a dozen other DS portable devices for multi-player challenges (only one game card needed).

Addition, subtraction, multiplication and division may hardly seem like something you want to occupy your time with when you can slot in more brainless fluff (which, of course we can’t do without for some escapism), but you’ll be surprised how math concepts make a part of your daily life.
Nothing wrong with kick-starting a lazy-ass brain!

5 / A
- Paul Blom




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