Special Features
- All exercises are based on easy-to-execute mathematical, cognitive and language-based tasks. In one activity, users play Rock, Paper, Scissors, but the catch is that sometimes users are asked to find the losing match instead of the winning one. Memorising 5x5 asks users to simply remember the position of numbers on a grid. Correct Change challenges users to work out the right amount of money to hand back after a transaction as quickly as possible.
- Reinvigorate your brain through various exercises approved by Dr Kawashima.
- Chart your progress over time see your daily improvements and lower your brain age.
- Discover 10 entirely new daily training exercises.
- Send a demo version to your friends via wireless downloads.
- Making a welcome return to this new title is the popular numbers game, Sudoku. Featuring three difficulty levels, there are more than 100 challenges!
- With More Brain Training: Dr Kawashima's How Old Is Your Brain?, users can also play with their family and friends. Using a single Game Card, two to 16 players can participate in four different exercises together.
Review
More Brain Training: Dr. Kawashima's How Old Is Your Brain? features fun new training exercises including Correct Change which challenges you on an everyday day task- to work out the right amount of money to hand back after a transaction as quickly as possible, Missing Symbols, a twist on the classic "20 calculations" test, and Masterpiece Recital which invites you to follow a music sheet shown on one screen and touch the corresponding piano keys on the touch screen. As your daily training continues, additional new exercises are unlocked.The DS Brain Age Checks take on a new form in this title as you're tested on three randomly selected exercises including old school classic Rock, Paper, Scissors which asks you to name the position to either win or lose against the object shown, Memorising 5x5 which sees you remembering the position of numbers on screen and Speedy Symbols which challenges your memory of symbols associated with specific numbers.With More Brain Training you can also play with your family and friends. Using a single game card, two to sixteen players can participate in four different exercises together. Three to sixteen players can also compete in a picture quiz to test each others artistic skills, where players score the other drawings to fin |