fabulous games! 10 stars!
About 4 months ago, and for the express purpose of mental acuity (I am 61), I got a DS Lite bundle with "Brain Age 1" in it.
I really like the DS and the BA game. About a month after I started BA1, I liked it so much that I bought BA 2. Then, a friend gave me "Big Brain Academy." I do all three, start to finish, daily.
The game's goal is to get your brain age down to 20 years. I started at "age 80," which was quite humbling because I thought I did quite a bit to keep mentally sharp! (But I am down to 29 and 31, respectively, for 1&2. I've been doing these games for 3 ½ months. I'm very competitive against a standard, so I am going to keep goin' for 20! Maybe before I turn 70!)
Scores are based on accuracy and speed. Instructions are very clear, both on-screen and in the written dox.
And it even greets you with "happy birthday" on your special day!
Negatives. (1) The voice-recognition feature doesn't work at all well. For me, at least. So I just skip the games that require it. Unfortunately, the brain age tests use games that use voice-recognition. More below on a cheat for this. (2) Sometimes the stylus is too sensitive. More below. (3) I'd like to be able to click through the helper's "commentary," but I haven't figured out how to do that yet. Also, depending on the time of day, there are 'events' (drawing from memory, acrostics, etc.) that I'd like to click through to get to the training games, but haven't figured that out yet, either. Maybe it's not possible.
The game is entirely stylus-controlled. The handwriting recognition is pretty good. (Far, far better than in "Brain Challenge"!) You don't have to bear down on the stylus in order for the game to "read" your response.
In fact, if you don't hold the stylus far enough away from the screen, you get "interference" and the game won't read your response. (A video on YouTube shows a fellow doing the set of 20 math-fact calculations in 7 seconds. It appears that he writes very small and doesn't lift the stylus very high. When I do this, I get non-reads. Right now I'm at 14 sec. and I don't see how I can write any faster, so this guy's record is safe from me!)
You will have to learn how to write so the game will read it. For example, fours must be "open" rectangles at the top - - not the ones that are closed triangles. K must be done in 2 strokes. Vs have to be wide. Ts must be upper case. Lower case Is, and put the dot quite far up. And so on. I have the most trouble with having it read my 5s.
You can play the games multiple times a day, but only the score on the first one will be recorded.
Some games come with normal/hard settings. The hard ones are real killers! ("Head Count" and "Triangle Math" are downright devilish!)
I feel very accomplished on days when I run the table on the calendar (BA 2) and the clock games (one on BA 1 and one on 2)! I don't care about the speed as much as I do the accuracy on these.
BA1 has 2 math-facts games (20 problems and 100). The reading-aloud game (how fast you can speak) is a bust because of the voice recognition problem. A memory game of tapping boxes in ascending numerical order is a challenge for me. You get to see the jumbled arrangement of the numbered boxes for a split second (like maybe a 1/10th). The game in which you count syllables in printed words is easy.
Triangle math is a little confusing at first. There are 3 numbers in a row at the top. Between each pair is a + or - sign. The middle number is shared. The line might read 8+5-3. You do two calculations: 8+5 is 13; and 5-3 is 2. At the bottom will be a sign that says whether to add or subtract the two answers (in this case, 13 and 2). Brush up on adding a subtracting negative numbers!
The clock game is for time elapsed. You are given 2 clocks to compare. Yes, I am still counting on my fingers for the number of hours, though I'm quicker on elapsed minutes.
One called "Head Count" is tracking people walking into and out of a house, which calls for lightning-fast calculations to arrive at how many people are in the house. With each of the 5 iterations, speed increases. (The "hard" setting for this one is darned scary. I don't want to give away the secret, but it's a hair-raiser! The first time I tried it, I laughed!)
There's a "voice calculation" game, in which you say the result of a math-fact equation. I skip that one.
There's also a Sudoku section. Can't comment on that. Don't like Sudoku.
The math section of BA2 opens with a game in which you are given three numbers, and you are to supply one of the four operations. For 6 [box] 4 = 2 , you write a minus sign. For the division sign, write a slash (/); don't bother to write the two dots. It's easy to get + and x signs rotated when you're writing in a hurry, so watch this.
The piano playing game is really fun, though some of the songs zip along at quite a challenging speed! The "hard" version of this one doesn't give the letter-names of the piano keys. The change-making game is really fun, too. Reminds me of the kids' cash register with wooden money we had in pre-school.
"Word Blend" requires you to distinguish words being said simultaneously. You write them down. The first is one word; then there are several of two words; and one of 3 words. A challenge. One of the hard ones for me recently were "motion" and "poison" said simultaneously. Your score is based on how many times you want to re-hear the speakers. Supposedly skill at aural differentiation is one of the best markers for brain acuity. In fact, there is another brain-train system I saw on PBS on one of their "begging shows." It was, as I recall, entirely based on aural recognition.
Related is one in which letters of words spin in a circle, and you must identify the words. Here is where how well you've learned to write so BA can read it is important.
"Math Recall" is the other math-fact game on BA2. You get a simple problem - - such as 5 + 4 - - and you write the answer. Then one of the numbers will be obliterated, and a new problem presented. You have to remember what was "erased" and do the new calculation. For example, the 5 might be blackened and a 7 substituted for the 4. In this case, the new equation is 5+7, but you don't get to see the 5 anymore.
I "study up" before I do the calendar game because I can never remember the date! The clock one will drive you nuts. I finally figured out how to "look" at the clocks so I could get the orientation right. I was even looking at the clocks as though I were inside a clock tower, looking outwards on the world. There's a better way, but you have to figure this out for yourself. Won't tell!
There's falling-block game where you have to track how many blocks are "behind the screen." Sometimes multiple blocks will fall into a slot, which is no big deal, however, sometimes blocks are rotated sideways (like a barbell) and cover 2 slots. It was a long time before I figured out how to deal with this; this is the only game that is not well-described in the documentation. When this happens, both slots take on the value of the "fullest" one prior to the barbell action. This one is hard for me. There's also a "running game," in which you keep track of a runner's position. This one is easy.
I am patiently waiting for BA3. No more clocks on that one, I hope!
Negatives. (1) The voice-recognition feature doesn't work at all well. For me, at least. So I just skip the games that require it. Unfortunately, the brain age tests use games that use voice-recognition. More below on a cheat for this. (2) Sometimes the stylus is too sensitive, as noted. (3) I'd like to be able to click through the "commentary," but I haven't figured out how to do that yet.
I like that the score is descending in age because I know what the perfect score is (age 20).
Haven't been able to find any cheats from other sources, so here are the ones I've stumbled on for both Brain Age 1 and 2.
1. If things get fouled up, press "start" to bail and have the option to start over.
2. To avoid taking brain age tests using the speaking function, when asked if you are in a place where you can speak, answer no.
3. When you want to do a "brain age check" (pink), hold down "select" as you tap it. Tap through the "I can't speak" screen, and you'll come upon a screen of other games to use to calculate brain age. (Same thing for BA 2.) Use these if you want additional games for practice, also.
4. The "virus buster" game on BA2 can be only unlocked after you've done 1 game that day. There is no bonus game on BA1.
5. When you're doing the BA tests and get fouled up, you can't press "start" to start over. Your only choice to abort is to turn off the unit.
6. When doing BA tests, if you make an error, you must correct it to continue. The game will not "pass over" wrong answers after a certain number of seconds have elapsed. Time matters!
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I recommend both BA games enthusiastically. You will not be disappointed in either.
mb
PS. The other day I caught myself doing the subtraction in my check register without reaching for the calculator! I hadn't even thought to get it out of the drawer! There were the numbers, I had to subtract them, and no big deal! Before-BA, I would have had the calculator in my hand before even reaching for the checkbook!
PSS. Big Brain Academy is fun, too. Some people say they object to the juvenile/"cartoon-y" graphics, but they don't bother me at all. I am just delighted when Dr. Lobe says, "SO MASSIVE" (caps his) and hear the boisterous calliope music. (I know. I am easily amused.)
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