Math
Arcadium
Where Math IS the Game
Pick Your Game
Coordinate Monster Hunt
Type coordinates to zap monsters on a live Cartesian grid. Three levels of intensity — plus a boss that moves along a linear equation. Survive all levels. Defeat the boss.
Tee Transformations
Start with Tropical Training — 12 levels mastering translations, reflections, and rotations on a coordinate grid. Unlock Tee Transformations: a full geometry golf course where you choose your club (Iron, Wedge, Driver — or the golden Combo Club) and swing shapes into the hole.
Double-Path: Robots
Aim a two-leg rocket at an enemy robot using Rise/Run slopes. Predict the trajectory, lock your slope, fire — and watch the math play out across a neon city skyline.
Wave Wonders
Explore the electromagnetic spectrum through sound and motion. Tune a color wheel to match incoming waves, then pilot a spaceship through a nebula — riding the wave you choose.
Punch Line
11 numbered orbs sit in a pipe. Slide the number line below them — line up the right zone under the piston and punch. Order integers, fractions, and square roots with precision scoring that rewards accuracy, not just correctness.
Coordinate Monster Hunt
Lesson Bundle
Six print-ready PDFs designed for Grades 6–8 — lesson plan, warm-up, worksheet, answer key, exit ticket, and class scoresheet. B&W and copier friendly.
Math games have great intentions.
But too often, the math and the game
live separate lives.
At Math Arcadium,
the math IS the game.
I've taught middle and high school math and what I've found is a dearth of math games where math is intrinsically connected to gameplay. Most that exist on the web ask a math related question and the player is "rewarded" with unrelated gaming. My goal with this website is to demonstrate pure mathematical concepts in action. The games will always be free. Optional lesson bundles and teacher resources help support the continued development of the site.
🎯 You're a Beta Tester
Math Arcadium is brand new and I'd love to hear from you! What's fun? What's confusing? What would make it better? Students, teachers, and parents — all voices welcome.