A hands-on pizza fraction game
Pizza Fraction Shop is built around a simple idea children understand quickly: a customer wants part of a pizza. The game shows a round pizza divided into equal slices, and the player taps the slices that should receive toppings. This makes the numerator and denominator visible. The denominator controls how many slices the pizza has, and the numerator controls how many of those slices need toppings for fraction practice.
Five playful ways to practice fractions
The game includes Make the Fraction, Compare Fractions, Equivalent Fractions, Fraction Race, and Boss Level. Make the Fraction asks players to prepare one pizza order. Compare Fractions shows two pizzas and asks which order is larger. Equivalent Fractions asks learners to choose a different fraction that shows the same amount. Fraction Race turns correct answers into scooter movement, while Boss Level asks players to serve five customers before time runs out.
Why the pizza shop setting helps
Fractions are easier to understand when the whole is clear. A pizza gives the learner a complete whole, equal parts, and a reason to select only some slices. Instead of guessing from symbols alone, the player sees exactly what 3/4 or 2/6 means. The customer order also gives the math a friendly purpose: serve the correct pizza and earn stars.
What kids practice while playing
Players practice reading fraction notation, connecting numerator and denominator to equal slices, comparing fraction sizes, and recognizing equivalent fractions such as 1/2, 2/4, 3/6, and 4/8. These skills support later work with fraction addition, subtraction, mixed numbers, ratios, and decimal connections.
How feedback works
Correct answers make the customer smile, add stars, and move the delivery scooter forward. If the answer is wrong, the game gently marks the issue, removes a heart, and lets the learner keep going. Boss Level adds a short timer and three hearts, which makes it more exciting without changing the fraction ideas the player has already practiced.
Useful for home or classroom review
Pizza Fraction Shop can be used for a quick classroom station, a warmup before a fraction lesson, or a short home practice session. Because each mode focuses on a different fraction habit, adults can choose the mode that matches the learner: building fractions first, comparing next, then equivalent fractions once the visual idea is comfortable.
Built as a standalone SumReflex game
This game has its own folder, play page, CSS, JavaScript, audio files, thumbnail, and open graph image. It uses the SumReflex animated loading screen and keeps fullscreen control outside the game, matching the website setup used by the other SumReflex math games.