3 scores max per player; No foul language, show respect for other players, etc.
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Game: DUCK SHOOT
Aim: Shoot as many ducks as you can
Method:
Use the catapult to shoot balls at the rows of ducks crossing the screen. Answer questions to win extra points.
Your final score is based on ducks hit or missed and the number of questions answered correctly.
8th grade / Number / Multiples Factors Primes / Multiples / LCM using product notation
To find the lowest common multiple (LCM) of two numbers, you need to find the smallest multiple that both numbers have in common. One way to do this is to use prime factorization and product notation. Here are the steps:
For example:
The prime factorization of one number is 2² x 3 x 5.
The prime factorization of the other number is 2 x 3² x 7.
The product notation is 2² x 3² x 5 x 7.
If required, you can simplify the product notation by multiplying the bases and their respective exponents. For example, 2² x 3² x 5 x 7 = 4 x 9 x 5 x 7 = 1260.
Here's an example of how to find the LCM of 12 and 15 using product notation:
Write each number as a product of prime factors.
Write the prime factors of each number in product notation, multiplying each factor by the highest power it appears in either number: 2² x 3 x 5. Note that the factor 5 appears in only one of the numbers but we still include it in the product notation.
To get the LCM as a number you can simplify the product notation by multiplying the bases and their respective exponents.
Therefore, the LCM of 12 and 15 is 2² x 3 x 5 in product notation, which is 60.
In this topic you are asked to use prime factorization to derive the lowest common multiple of 2 numbers and present your answer using product notation.
With our Duck shoot math game you will be practicing the topic "LCM using product notation" from 8th grade / Number / Multiples Factors Primes / Multiples Factors Primes. The math in this game consists of 16 questions that ask you to identify the lowest common multiple (LCM) of 2 numbers using product notation.
DUCK SHOOT is a fun game to learn math where you attempt to knock over all the fairground ducks in each level. In the first level there are only 6 ducks but by level 10 there are 24 fast moving "quackers quacking"...
After each level, win an additional 20 points by correctly answering a math question from your selected topic. There is no timer in this game: take as long as you like to answer the math questions correctly for a best score to get you on the DUCK SHOOT leaderboard.
UXO * Duck shoot * The frog flies * Pong * Cat and mouse * The beetle and the bee
Rock fall * Four in a row * Sow grow * Choose or lose * Mix and match
DUCK SHOOT is a fairground themed game of knocking ducks off the rails to win points.
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