Pick a Game. Beat Your Best Score.
Free math games covering trigonometry, algebra, arithmetic, and fractions — built for practice that actually feels like practice, not another worksheet.
Every game on this page turns a specific math skill into something you can practice for five minutes without it feeling like homework. These free math games work because they force active recall — you have to produce the answer, not just recognize it — which is exactly what exams and quizzes actually test.
Whether you’re after a unit circle practice game (see our unit circle article first if you need a refresher), a multiplication and division game, an order of operations game, or something to make fractions click for a younger student, there’s a game below built specifically for that skill — not a generic quiz reused across ten different topics.
Browse Free Math Games by Topic
Trigonometry
Two ways to work on the same skill: a guided unit circle practice tool for learning the pattern, and a faster unit circle game for testing your speed once the pattern has stuck. Both cover degrees, radians, coordinates, quadrant signs, and exact trig values — the exact areas students ask about most when searching for a unit circle review or memorization game.
Precalculus
Unit Circle Game — Signal Lab
Five arcade modes — Angle Finder, Coordinates, Trig Values, Quadrants, and a 60-second Speed Run — test how well you’ve actually memorized the unit circle, with combo multipliers and a Boss Run for players who want the hardest version.
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Precalculus
Unit Circle Practice: Signal Quest
A slower, mission-based way to learn the unit circle before speed-testing yourself. Decode angle “signals” to practice reference angles, radians, coordinates, and quadrant signs, earning XP and streaks as the pattern clicks.
Play Now →Algebra
Solving for x comes down to one idea: use inverse operations to isolate the variable while keeping both sides balanced. This game turns that idea into a rescue mission instead of a stack of equations on paper.
Grades 6–9
Solve for X: Hero Rescue
Every correct answer moves the hero one step closer to rescuing the princess. Covers one-step and two-step equations, equations with parentheses, and equations with x on both sides — solving linear equations without a worksheet in sight.
Play Now →Arithmetic
Times tables, division fluency, and getting the order of operations (PEMDAS, or BODMAS, or DMAS, depending where you studied) right every time — the two skills that quietly cause the most careless mistakes further along in math.
Grades 3–7
Math Invaders: Multiplication & Division
Defend Earth by blasting the meteor showing the right answer. Waves progress from basic multiplication facts to division, missing-factor equations, and signed integer operations — reaction-speed practice that builds fact recall.
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Grades 4–8
Order of Operations: Bridge Builder
Build a bridge log by log by choosing the correct next step of an expression — brackets first, then multiplication and division left to right, then addition and subtraction. Works for PEMDAS, BODMAS, or DMAS, whichever your curriculum uses.
Play Now →Fractions & Number Sense
Decimals, fractions, integers, and absolute values, taught through pictures and quick decisions rather than abstract notation — built for students who are just getting comfortable with what these numbers actually represent.
Grades 4–7
Frogie Cross Road Math Game
Guide Frogie across busy roads and rivers by hopping onto the truck or log that matches the rule on screen — comparing decimals, matching fractions to decimals, ordering integers, and reading absolute value, all under time pressure.
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Grades 3–5
Pizza Fractions Game: Feed the Hungry Monster
Answer ten pizza-slice challenges to keep a hungry monster fed — identifying shaded fractions, finding equivalent fractions, comparing sizes, and making one whole, with combo bonuses for answering correctly in a row.
Play Now →Which Game Should You Start With?
Not sure where to begin? Match your grade level or the topic you’re studying to one of the free math games below.
Game Manual (FAQ)
Quick answers before you jump in.
Is there a game to review the unit circle?
Yes — Unit Circle Practice: Signal Quest is built specifically for review. Its guided missions walk you through angles, coordinates, reference angles, and quadrant signs before you move on to speed-testing with the Unit Circle Game.
What’s the best way to memorize the unit circle?
Repetition beats reading it once. Unit Circle Practice’s streak-and-XP system and Unit Circle Game’s Speed Run mode both push you to answer the same 16 angles over and over until the pattern sticks — which is more effective for recall than staring at a static chart.
How can I test my unit circle knowledge online for free?
Play Unit Circle Game’s timed modes for a tougher, faster self-test, or use Unit Circle Practice’s mission mode if you want the answers explained as you go. Both are free and don’t require an account.
What does “All Students Take Calculus” mean?
It’s a classic memory trick for the unit circle. Each word marks which trig function is positive in that quadrant: All (Quadrant I — everything positive), Students (Quadrant II — only Sine), Take (Quadrant III — only Tangent), Calculus (Quadrant IV — only Cosine).
Is there a game for PEMDAS, BODMAS, or DMAS practice?
Order of Operations: Bridge Builder covers all three naming conventions — the underlying rule is the same, so whether your curriculum calls it PEMDAS, BODMAS, or DMAS, the game gives you brackets, multiplication and division, then addition and subtraction, in the correct sequence.
Are these math games free, and do I need to sign in?
Every game on this page is free to play directly in your browser — no sign-up, no downloads.
What grade levels are these games for?
Together they span roughly grades 3–9. Pizza Fractions and Frogie Cross Road suit younger learners working on fractions, decimals, and integers; Math Invaders and Order of Operations fit grades 3–8 arithmetic; Solve for X targets grades 6–9 algebra; and the two Unit Circle games are built for precalculus and trigonometry students.
