Twinoo the Brain Train
by zigah111
Twinoo the Brain Train
Tags for Twinoo the Brain Train
Description
★ train your brain - both of the hemispheres at the same time!
★ mix colors on the right
★ solve simple math problems on the left
★ use both of your brain hemispheres together to beat the time!
Join the 5 million players who already jumped aboard the Twinoo Brain Train!
May the best brain hemisphere win!
How to Play
★ Solve simple math equations on the left side and color mixing equations on the right side by clicking one of the three answers given below each equation or use keys Q, W, E and I, O, P
★ The math includes adding, subtracting, multiplying and dividing numbers from 1 to 9.
★ Color mixing works like mixing watercolors or crayons - also see the color wheel (by Johannes Itten) in the Help menu
Developer Updates
Twinoo is now also available on almost every mobile device out there!
Comments
Rexonon
Mar. 28, 2012
The maths is easy. As for the colours I have absolutely no idea. I know red and yellow makes orange. That's about it.
The Colour Wheel is your friend. ;) (ps: where colour mixing fails, some colour memory can help)
honnza
Mar. 28, 2012
Umm, which of the shades of orange is the mix of red and yellow?... Apparently, not this one.
honnza
Mar. 28, 2012
You really need a touch screen to play this. And both hands free.
So just to be absolutely clear about this, there is a touch-screen Twinoo out there, available for: * iPhone, iPad and iPod Touch (App Store) * Android phones and tablets (find it on Amazon (US) or msg me) * Windows Phone 7 (Marketplace) * BlackBerry 480x360 phones and PlayBook (App World) * Intel MeeGo Netbooks (AppUp)
AceFrahm
Apr. 06, 2012
It's pretty, but the gameplay needs to be more interesting than "beat a timer".
ThirdParty
Apr. 01, 2012
Since most people are right-handed, wouldn't it make more sense to have the arithmetic on the right side of the visual field (where the left brain will see it) and the colors on the left side (where the right brain will see it)?
Thought about this since I read about that, too, somewhere a long time ago. When I did research for this game, though, I couldn't find any substantial evidence of this opposing brain/body fact - can you point me in the right direction here? Thanks!