Game Info
Updated: N/A
Category: Puzzles
Score: 7.4
3D Ball Bounce Brain Kids Math Platform run

How to Play

On pc Slide to rotate and guide left or right On mobile amp tablet Touch the screen and drag left or right

Description

Count and Bounce isn’t your average ball-rolling game, though at first glance it might look like one. The real trick is in the numbers—literally. You guide a stream of balls across a patchwork path made of tiles, each offering you different choices along the way. Some tiles just help you bounce onwards, others throw a math question in your path—simple enough for kids to manage but not always so basic that you can sleepwalk through them. That’s where things get interesting. You’re not racing against time exactly, but there’s still this steady urge to keep your momentum going. Do you risk a tricky multiplication tile for a big bonus or play it safe? The only real rule is don’t let your balls fall off the track—which can happen fast if you aren’t paying attention, or if you pick the wrong number when faced with those calculation challenges. It’s actually kind of fun seeing how far you can stretch your brain while also keeping an eye on physics. The game feels friendly—a bit playful—but there are spots where the difficulty sneaks up when your guard is down. Definitely more than a simple tap-and-go sort of thing. Well, anyone who likes puzzles or wants something that feels both casual and quietly competitive would probably get hooked.

Editor's View

I thought Count and Bounce was going to be all about timing jumps—turns out it’s more about mental math than I expected. That caught me off guard in a good way (and maybe frustrated me once or twice). Sometimes I found myself hesitating at the calculation tiles longer than I’d admit—especially when there were multiple options and only one was really helpful depending on my number of balls left. I do wish the visuals had a tiny bit more variation, honestly—it gets repetitive visually after several rounds—but I kept coming back anyway just to try beating my last score. It’s interesting; sometimes these simple puzzle-runners manage to grab your attention for longer than expected. So yeah, not perfect—could use some visual flair—but definitely has its clever moments.