National Parenting Publication Awards: Silver
In Loot Pursuit: Pompeii™, players race against the clock to save stolen artifacts by solving Common Core aligned math problems.
In Loot Pursuit: Pompeii™, players race against the clock to save stolen artifacts by solving Common Core aligned math problems.
Scholastic chose Loot Pursuit: Pompeii, our CCSS-aligned math app, as one of the Top Teacher Picks for games and apps of 2014.
Dig-It! Games received a Best of Show award from Tech & Learning at ISTE 2015 for its app, Mayan Mysteries. The program recognizes outstanding products exhibited at ISTE. Winners are selected by panels of professional users and editors based on descriptions provided by you via the nomination form as well as on judges’ inspection at the convention.
Dig-It! Games received NAPPA (National Parenting Publication Award) Silver Award for both Roman Town and 3 Digits. NAPPA enlists a team of independent expert judges and family testers to review each submission thoroughly. Together, they select the most entertaining, appealing, safe, educational, age-appropriate and enduring products as NAPPA Gold, Silver and Bronze winners.
Loot Pursuit: Pompeii received an Award of Excellence from Tech & Learning in 2015. Honored products include innovative applications that break new ground as well as those that added significant enhancements to proven education tools. A panel of more than 30 educators, who tested hundreds of entries, chose the winners.
Test your Maya knowledge!
100+ randomized trivia questions about the Maya from the creators of the top ranked Mayan Mysteries (featured: Best New Apps and Games Kids 9-11)
Impress random strangers at cocktail parties with your erudite knowledge of:
All content is 100% historically accurate.
The best Maya Quiz app around!
Calculating takes on a whole new meaning in this fast paced math counting game! Fun for all ages.
Everyone knows 1 + 1 = 2. But did you know Dot + Line = 6? Use the ancient Maya’s remarkable number system to translate numbers, but watch out for the timer!
Build math skills and learn the Maya’s unique base 20 number system! In this fast-paced game, players take their math skills to the next level. Using the ancient civilization’s revolutionary numerals—shell, dot, and line— translate randomly generated numbers in this competitive mental-math challenge. As players learn fascinating facts about the ancient Maya, they also practice this unique number system. Because of this intertwining of elements, 3 Digits becomes an immersive, engaging and cross-curricular learning experience. Players must use their understanding of properties of operations with multi-digit arithmetic, the significance of place-value, and number system bases in this fast-paced challenge. Math has never been so much fun!
Support for desktop play as an HTML 5 games recently added. Play it in your math classroom on your Chromebook.
The Maya lived in what is now Central America, where their descendants still live today. The Maya culture covered a large region, including the modern countries of Guatemala, El Salvador, Honduras, Belize and a large portion of southern Mexico. From before the 16th century BC to the Spanish conquest in the 17th century AD, the Maya built huge cities in the jungles of Central America. The Maya boasted complex political organizations, a unique artistic style, and an impressive grasp of mathematics, astronomy and writing. Maya achievements in math, astronomy, recording time, technology and commerce rivaled and often surpassed the great civilizations of the West.
Best known for their calendar, the Maya created so much more. Maya kings ruled vast regions from huge cities filled with monumental architecture. Pyramid temples rose over 200ft, towering above the jungle canopy. Tens of thousands of people lived and worked in the cities: court attendants, artisans, farmers, priests, and more. Merchants and traders sold and traded their products in large, well-organized markets. Astronomers recorded their studies of stars and planets in books that were archived in large palace libraries and engineers laid out cities with remarkable precision.
There are currently over 7 million Maya in Central America, including roughly half the populations of Guatemala and Belize. Maya culture has been preserved through oral and written histories, dances and rituals. In many villages, social organization, agricultural practices, technology and beliefs about family life and the agricultural cycle have not changed significantly in hundreds of years. Recently schools have begun teaching Maya history in the Mayan language, an important step in preserving the heritage of this remarkable culture.
The Maya had a remarkably detailed understanding of math. We kind of take it for granted that you can add or multiply huge numbers and do complicated engineering calculations to build roller coasters and space stations, but did you know that none of that would be possible if we didn’t understand about place values? You learned about ones and tens and hundreds places in math, right? Well that’s a pretty advanced concept that very few ancient cultures understood. But the Maya did!
Maya astronomers figured out that to track the orbits of planets and predict eclipses and such, they needed a symbol to represent zero. So, like our decimal system, Maya math was based on place values. Maya math used a base 20 system with place values of 1s, 20s, 400s, 8000s, and so on. Symbols were used to represent zero, one and five: a shell, a dot and a bar. Numbers were made using a combination of these three symbols placed in vertical columns where each row was a place value. Using this system with the all important zero symbol, Maya architects built massive structures, engineers planned the orientation of buildings with extreme precision and astronomers predicted eclipses and other celestial events.
The Story of Mathematics – Mayan Mathematics
Snatch the artifacts before time runs out! Test your knowledge of all things Roman in this fast-paced snatch game. How many artifacts can you identify before time expires?
Try your hand at this addictive game from the creators of the top-ranked Mayan Mysteries (featured: Best New Apps and Games Kids 9-11) and the award-winning Roman Town.
Stop that thief! The term ‘calculating’ takes on a new meaning when you put your math skills to the test protecting rare artifacts from pesky looters enlisted by Ladrone, the master thief featured in the award-winning game Mayan Mysteries.
Dig-It! Games presents Loot Pursuit: Tulum, a fun, skills-based math game designed for 5th, 6th and 7th graders. Players team up with Team Q to protect rare artifacts from the Maya site of Tulum in Mexico by reclaiming them from looters before they can be sold on the black market. Players must use all their knowledge of Number and Operations in Base Ten to solve math problems and collect ancient artifacts, which they can learn more about in the Loot section. But get it wrong, and a rare artifact might be lost forever!
• Realistic, high quality graphics and an easy to use interface
• Test your math fluency against the clock with problems designed specifically for students in grades 5-7
• Learn about the ancient Maya
• Skills-based learning
• Content aligns to Common Core State Standards
• Randomized problems allow for infinite replay
Looters are stealing ancient Roman artifacts, and it’s up to you to stop them!
Use your math skills to stop the looters and recover the priceless artifacts in this fast-paced journey through Pompeii! Solve challenging problems, collect authentic Roman artifacts and learn fun facts about Roman life.