1. Math Blaster Mystery: The Great Brain Robbery (Video Game) - TV Tropes
Inside the house, you have a Fetch Quest to complete, first collecting coins that allow you to play the mini-games and then winning those mini-games to earn ...
Math Blaster Mystery: The Great Brain Robbery is an Edutainment Game in the Blaster series, specifically the Blaster Mystery sub-series. It focuses on pre-algebra. Dr. Dabble, an evil Mad Scientist, has stolen the brain of a math genius named Big …
2. Math Blaster Mystery: The Great Brain Robbery
Missing: money | Show results with:money
Math Blaster Mystery: The Great Brain Robbery, is the first Math Blaster mystery game featuring Rave and Dudley Dabble. Dr. Dudley Dabble has stolen Big Brain's brain out of his head and it's up to Rave to recover the brain and bring Dr Dabble to justice. One night, Rave is in his house reading his book and listening to the radio broadcasting Big Brain's attempt at Math Olympic Gold, when suddenly the news interrupts, saying that someone has stolen Big Brain's brain out of his head, much to Rave
3. MATH BLASTER MYSTERY: THE GREAT BRAIN ROBBERY
Missing: money | Show results with:money
by HeroOfAvalon As kids make their way through Dr. Dabble's creepy mansion, they'll build pre-algebra, logical-thinking and word proble...
4. Math Blaster ages 8-9
The player must move GC around a maze to find the bugs with an equation which fits the target range. The game is won when the player has collected 5 bugs.
Math Blaster Ages 8-9 is one of the games in the Math Blaster series. It features the two reoccurring characters Max Blaster and GC, and their robotic dog Mel. An old woman is entering a supercomputer-operated metropolis when she is stopped by one of the guards. She presents a math problem displayed on her handheld computer which is too complex for the guard to solve, when all of a sudden she is knocked out by sleeping gas loaded inside the handheld computer. Once inside the old woman pulls off
5. Blaster Mystery Series (Video Game) - TV Tropes
In Math Blaster: Pre-Algebra, you stack barrels, which generates food for one of Dr. Dabble's robots. You win the activity when you feed the robot so much that ...
The Blaster Mystery series is a kind of Spin-Off to the larger Blaster series of Edutainment Games. While the original Math Blaster teaches basic arithmetic to elementary-aged children, Math Blaster Mystery teaches pre-algebra to somewhat older …
6. That's Edutainment: Math Blaster Mystery: The Great Brain Robbery
Aug 18, 2021 · It would have been easy for the company to continue making variations on Math Blaster, now “the world's best-selling math program,” but someone ...
See AlsoCardiovascular examinationThis time on That’s Edutainment, we look at an unjustly-forgotten horror edutainment title, The Great Brain Robbery, and the games that followed.
7. 23 Educational Games From The '90s That Actually Go Hard - BuzzFeed
Jun 25, 2024 · ... Math Blaster!? ... If you were around 5-10 in the 1990s, Treasure Mountain! was a good way to get down on some reading, math, and logic skills.
Did they ever find Carmen Sandiego?
8. Mathmateer App Review | Common Sense Media
Dec 7, 2018 · Mathmateer is an educational arithmetic and basic math game. Kids earn money to build rockets by solving problems -- choosing from addition, subtraction, ...
Practice math skills and launch a rocket ship into space. Read Common Sense Media's Mathmateer review, age rating, and parents guide.
9. The trouble with serious video games.
Jun 27, 2007 · Any child of the 1980s and 1990s will remember Mavis Beacon Teaches Typing and Math Blaster Mystery: The Great Brain Robbery, games that ...
Ever since video games were invented, parents and teachers have been trying to make them boring. Any child of the 1980s and 1990s will remember Mavis...
10. 50 Educational Video Games That Homeschoolers Love - OEDB.org
... way to get them to practice. It contains more than 25,000 words at 100 ... Math Blaster: One of the most widely used math games out there, this free ...
50 educational video games that can help students (both young and old) learn new things, develop problem-solving skills, and get creative.