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Brain Age: Train Your Brain in Minutes a Day!

Brain Age: Train Your Brain in Minutes a Day!

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From: Nintendo
Category: Video Games

List Price: $19.99
Buy New: $17.89
You Save: $2.10 (11%)



New (32) from $17.89

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 291 reviews
Sales Rank: 59

Platform: Nintendo Ds
ESRB: Everyone
Media: Video Game
Autographed: No
Memorabilia: No
Batteries Included: No
Age: 5 - 20 years
Operating System: Nintendo DS
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2
Dimensions (in): 0 x 0 x 0

MPN: ntr p ande
Model: 45496737122
UPC: 045496737122
EAN: 0045496737122
ASIN: B000EGELP0

Release Date: April 17, 2006
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Shipping: Expedited shipping available
Condition: Brand New ..Factory sealed..Fast USPS 1st class shipping..100% satisfaction guaranteed or your money back!!

Features:
  • Activities include quickly solving simple math problems & counting people going in and out of a house simultaneously
  • Draw pictures on the Touch Screen, or read classic literature out loud
  • Play Sudoku, the popular number puzzle game

Accessories:

  • Electronic Gaming Monthly
  • Play
  • Tips & Tricks Magazine
  • Nintendo DS Lite Travel Power Pack

Similar Items:

  • Brain Age 2: More Training in Minutes a Day!
  • Nintendo DS Lite Crimson / Black
  • Nintendo DS Lite Cobalt / Black
  • Nintendo DS Lite Travel Kit
  • Nintendo DS Lite Onyx Black

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
Brain Age: Train Your Brain in Minutes a Day is a fun, rewarding form of entertainment everyone can enjoy. Inspired by cutting-edge neuroscience, it's a full set of reading and mathematic exercises that stimulate the brain. At the start, you'll take a series of tests and get a score that determines how old your brain is. This is your "Brain Age" -- by performing daily exercises just minutes a day over weeks and months, the better you'll get and the lower your Brain Age will get.


Customer Reviews:   Read 286 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars I Love it!   November 7, 2008
I love this game and I think it's great. The only DS game I like better than this one is Brain Age 2. And the only reason I like that one better is because of the piano game. I think they are both great products.

I was very busy at work for a couple of months, so I didn't a chance to do my daily training. When I finally got back to playing, that face on the screen told me that it was disappointed in me because he didn't see me in 2 months. He looked really sad. I felt kind of guilty!



5 out of 5 stars Brain Age helping my brain go back in time!   October 10, 2008
This is really cool. I never cared for Sudoku before and now I am addicted! The tests are fun and surprisingly challenging.


4 out of 5 stars "Performing simple arithmetic really wakes up your brain"--Dr. Kawashima   October 9, 2008
Brain Age is a brain training game to keep your brain young designed by renown neuroscientist Dr. Ryuta Kawashima. I had a lot of fun with this game for a few months. It shows what the DS is capable of doing--understand your voice through the microphone and what you write with the stylus. After I opened all the training games and scored as well as I think I can on them, read all the training tips, and noticed repeats in drawing exercises and the stories to read aloud, the game got boring and I was no longer motivated to turn it on.

The game starts with a test to calculate your brain age. You see words of colors like "red," "black," "blue," "yellow," but you have to say the color that the word is, not the word itself. For example if you see the word "red" printed in blue, you need to say "blue," not "red." This test was sometimes frustrating because it couldn't always understand "blue" for some reason. You can be tested in other ways to determine your brain age. My favorite is the list of words you memorize and then write as many down as you remember. I wish that was a daily training game.

There are nine daily training games. In this first Brain Age, the exercises are math-heavy which I enjoyed but others may not. It keeps track of how many correct answers you give and how quickly you finish the games and scores you accordingly. It also keeps graphs of how you do over time. You also get an indication of how fast you were by its standards with graphics like a man walking, a car driving back and forth, a jet flying, or a space shuttle taking off. Two exercises are a series of simple math problems to answer as fast as you can. Next you read passages of classic novels aloud (I never scored super high on this one, I can't imagine someone reading aloud fast enough to get a space shuttle score). "Low to High" flashes several different numbers in squares and you have to memorize them fast enough to tell the game where you saw the lowest number, the next lowest, and so on.

"Syllable Count" was one of the easiest for me. It give you well-known sayings and you count the syllables. In "Head Count", you have to keep track of who is coming into and leaving a house so you can tell the computer how many are in the house at the end. When the game speeds up, it can be very challenging. "Triangle Math" is more math problems but more complicated because you use the answers to the first problems to find answers to the next. "Time Lapse" shows you two clocks (with hands) and you need to figure out how much time has gone by. "Voice Calculation" is more math problems only you answer them out loud. Again, sometimes the game could not figure out what was being said (especially thinking "six" was "seven") which was very frustrating. You get a brain tip after each game and, after reading the same ones several times, I just zoomed through them without looking at them. It got annoying.

In addition, you're sometimes asked to draw things from memory. If you have more than one player, it will compare the drawings which is fun. It also keeps track of the calendar. It will ask you a question one day and, a few days later, ask you for the answer you gave to that question to see if you remember. The game also offers many sudoku puzzles that range in difficulty. Sudoku works very well with the D.S., but make sure the game translates your numbers correctly before zooming out. Sometimes it will think you wrote a different number even if you wrote clearly. I've actually gotten into the habit of writing open-headed 4's because of this game. Sudoku usually worked well.

The game is fun but the re-playability (unlike Sims games, for example, that I have literally played in their entirety three of four times) is low once you've mastered it by scoring a 20 brain age. It is unique though, and may be the only homework kids will want to do for awhile.



5 out of 5 stars Kids Don't Love it   September 20, 2008
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

I guess when my kids (8 & 10 ) are playing their D.S. they want their fun games! Maybe when they're a bit older they'll love it...

I think it's great!



5 out of 5 stars ~Surprisingly fun~   September 16, 2008
I purchased a Nintendo DS and the "Brain Age" game for my mother-in-law as a gift (that she requested). She absolutely LOVED it.... But what surprised me was how much *I* enjoyed playing. When she returned home, with her game, I missed it so much that I finally went out and bought my own DS and game. I play it nearly daily, not for the brain bennies, but because it's FUN! And pretty soon the rest of my family (there are slots for saving up to four "players" with each "Brain Age" game) was playing it as well.

I don't know about the brain benefits, but I do know that "Brain Age" is fun. I would recommend the game to anyone who would enjoy wasting time playing a video game - NOT mindlessly. =D


 

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