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For grown-ups

What your child practices

TimesQuest is built for grade 3 (ages 8–9) — the year multiplication, division and first fractions arrive. It follows the way these are taught best: build it with your hands first, then name it. The hands-on builders are the main event; the short read-aloud "quick checks" just see what's sticking.

  • Array Builder — a story like "2 baskets, 8 apples each." Your child builds the array with two steppers and watches why groups × in-each makes the total. Turn-arounds (2×8 and 8×2) both count — a real grade-3 idea.
  • Fractions on the Line — your child guesses where a fraction like ¾ lands on a 0-to-1 line before the marks appear, then sees the equal steps and finds out why. Guessing first — even wrong — is what makes it stick.
  • Quick checks — short multiple-choice rounds across equal groups, fair shares, fact families, the break-apart strategy, fractions, area, and fact fluency. Every question is read aloud; a hint appears only after a first miss, and the answer is always explained kindly.

Play together — and go easy

Everything is read aloud, so a transitional reader can play on their own — and it's better with you nearby. There are no timers and no way to "fail": a tricky one shows the answer kindly and moves on. Math worry is real at this age — keep it calm, celebrate the try, and let your child build before they answer.

Your privacy

TimesQuest runs entirely on your device. There are no accounts and no ads, and nothing your child does leaves the device. A little progress (a level and a streak) is saved just on this device. Reading aloud uses your browser's built-in voice — no recording, no microphone.