In this board domination game, students battle in groups to place their sushi on as many squares as possible on the table. Strategy, ginger and wasabi are all weapons they can use to win!
The game is customizable with three different board games. Questions can be displayed on screen or not. |
Type of game: Group battle.
Length of game: Short, Medium, Long Question types: Each group answers questions during their turn only. |
Game Features
Capture 4 spaces in a square and watch your sushi evolve into a king sushi!
Select and play with 12 different sushis.
HOW TO PLAY
1. Start a new game.
2. Select the amount of student teams, the table size and to display questions on screen or not*.
3. Select a sushi and name for each team of students.
4. Start the game by asking the first team to select a square.
5. If the answer is correct, the team takes control of the square. If 4 squares next to each other are won, the sushi will evolve in a king sushi!
6. For each team, one time in the game, a wasabi ball can be used to block a square (perhaps to reserve it for later, or to stop an opponent from evolving a sushi) and ginger can be used to destroy another's team wasabi.
7. The team with the most sushi and king sushi on the table wins!
*Deciding not to display questions on screen will allow teachers to ask a question aloud, add supporting material in a separate window (a video, an audio, a larger math problem, etc.) and use the game without making it content dependent.
2. Select the amount of student teams, the table size and to display questions on screen or not*.
3. Select a sushi and name for each team of students.
4. Start the game by asking the first team to select a square.
5. If the answer is correct, the team takes control of the square. If 4 squares next to each other are won, the sushi will evolve in a king sushi!
6. For each team, one time in the game, a wasabi ball can be used to block a square (perhaps to reserve it for later, or to stop an opponent from evolving a sushi) and ginger can be used to destroy another's team wasabi.
7. The team with the most sushi and king sushi on the table wins!
*Deciding not to display questions on screen will allow teachers to ask a question aloud, add supporting material in a separate window (a video, an audio, a larger math problem, etc.) and use the game without making it content dependent.