Forest of MATH
About
This is a game I made for my 8-year old who loves games, but doesn't like to practice math. In the game, the damage dealt to enemies is a result of calculations. This means that results which are harder to compute are more beneficial to the gameplay. I was surprised that he would estimate and compute hard ones first, because it meant beating the enemies in style.
Features:
- explore the forest
- fight monsters in turn-based combat
- cast mathemagic spells
- compute damage with addition and subtraction up to 200, and multiplication up to 100
- find map scrolls to help you navigate the maze, or health upgrades to beat bosses
- collect magic digits to build your numeric spells
Is it hard?
- In the early game the enemies are weaker, and there's more room for error.
- Later enemies have more HP and hit harder, but the player can still win with a couple of errors. Sometimes the battles can be won quickly, if the player gets lucky with digits chosen for calculations. For example, 98+98 does massive damage.
- Bosses require precise computation. Even then, make sure you collect most of the health upgrades before attacking.
What's the Forest like?
- The map is procedurally a generated maze - different every time you start a new game.
- Monster and treasure placement is also randomised.
- Sometimes you might get map upgrades at the very start, another time you might get health upgrades instead.
- Order in which you gain the digits is also random. You might start with something easy as 2 and 6, and doing math like 26+2 or 62-2. Or you might get 8 or 9 quickly, which is more challenging, for example to compute: 83-38.
System requirements for PC
Minimum:
- OS: Windows XP or newer
- Processor: Core2Duo 1.0 GHz
- Memory: 2048 MB RAM
- Graphics: 512MB Video RAM, OpenGL 1.1+
- Storage: 120 MB available space