Game Info
Updated: N/A
Category: Puzzles
Score: 7.3
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How to Play

Write the number following the arrows

Description

World of Alice: Draw Numbers sits comfortably between a playful sketchpad and an early math class. Designed for younger learners—honestly, maybe even pre-readers—it keeps things direct. Players get to trace or draw numbers right on their device screen, whether that’s a tablet or a phone, and the whole thing has this gentle pace that doesn’t really rush you along at all. It’s interesting—the mechanics are pretty forgiving, letting you practice the same figure as much as you want before moving on. So if you slip up on a curve or accidentally make a wobbly line, there’s no ‘fail’ state here. The vibe is more encouragement than pressure; mistakes are just part of the process. Visual prompts guide the hand so even if your coordination isn’t perfect (honestly, few kids have it down), you'll probably manage fine with a bit of repetition. There’s audio feedback too. Meant for little hands and developing minds, but adults peeking over shoulders might find themselves tempted to join in once or twice—drawing with your finger has a certain appeal, right? To be honest, it feels like something teachers could use in classrooms or parents could hand off during quiet time at home. It doesn’t try to do everything; it just does its one thing clearly enough.

Editor's View

Tried out World of Alice: Draw Numbers out of curiosity—it’s made for kids but I wanted to see how well it teaches number writing. At first glance it seems overly simple but actually that kind of works in its favor. The instructions don’t talk down to players and the tracing system lets you redo as much as needed without making it tedious. I did feel like maybe after a while some variety would help hold attention longer (a couple extra mini-challenges wouldn’t hurt). That said, seeing how naturally my niece took to tracing numbers was kind of satisfying—she barely needed any help after figuring out what to do once. One little thing though: sometimes if your hand slips off-line the correction can be forgiving almost to a fault. Well, overall? Straightforward and gentle for beginners.