Addition Game for first small-sum practice
What the game asks the player to do
The Scratch instructions say the game starts with the green flag, shows two numbers or matching quantities of apples, and asks the player to press the number that matches the sum.
The same instructions say each correct answer gives a star and five stars win the game. The number range is one to five.
Why the small range matters
Because the source range is one to five, this game is a short early-addition activity rather than a broad arithmetic trainer.
Use it when the learner benefits from visible quantities and small totals. Once five-star wins become easy, move to a different game instead of stretching this page beyond its source design.
How to make the session more useful
Ask the player to count the two groups before choosing the answer. That keeps the activity tied to the apples and numbers described in the source instructions.
If the player guesses, pause and recount. The source game gives star feedback, but the teaching value comes from the explanation before the click.
Quick checklist
- Click the green flag and look at both displayed addends.
- Count the apples or numbers before pressing an answer.
- Use five stars as a natural stopping point.
- Move on when sums from one to five feel automatic.