Free Primary School Fraction Practice Game for Singapore Students
Fractions can be one of those topics that make students freeze.
A child may understand whole numbers quite well, but the moment they see something like:
1/2 + 1/4
or
3 1/2 - 1 3/4
suddenly the brain goes, “Nope. I resign.”
That is why I created this simple CT-1 Fraction Kitchen Rush game — a short, low-pressure fraction practice game for primary school students who need more confidence with basic fraction skills.
What Is This Fraction Practice Game?
This is a free browser-based game where students help CT-1, my little cardboard robot study buddy, complete kitchen orders by answering fraction questions.
Each round has 10 randomised questions, so students do not simply memorise the answers after playing once. The questions change each time, while still keeping the practice focused on important basic fraction skills.
The game is designed to be short, simple, and easy to try. No login is needed. No download is needed. Students can just play directly on this page.
What Fraction Skills Does the Game Cover?
This game helps students practise:
Equivalent fractions
Simplifying fractions
Addition of simple fractions
Subtraction of simple fractions
Addition of mixed numbers
Subtraction of mixed numbers
Mixed-number subtraction with borrowing
For example, students may see questions such as:
1/2 = ?/4
2/7 + 3/7 = ?
3/4 - 1/8 = ?
2 1/5 + 1 3/5 = ?
6 1/3 - 2 2/3 = ?
The questions begin with easier fraction ideas before moving into mixed numbers. This helps students warm up instead of being thrown straight into the deep end of the fraction swimming pool.
And let’s be honest — fractions already feel deep enough.
Why I Made This Game
I made this game as a simple practice activity for students who need more exposure to fractions without feeling like they are doing another worksheet.
Worksheets are useful, of course. But sometimes students need a different way to practise, especially when they are tired, anxious, or already convinced that fractions are out to destroy their lives.
This game gives students a quick way to revise basic fraction skills in a more relaxed format.
It is not meant to replace proper teaching, correction, or guided practice. Instead, it works best as a short revision activity after students have already learnt the topic.
How the Game Works
Students answer 10 fraction questions in one round.
For each question, they choose from multiple-choice answers. If they get the answer correct, they earn points. If they get it wrong, CT-1 reacts with a shocked face, and the game shows the correct answer with simple working.
There is also a hint button for students who need a little help.
The aim is not to create stress. The aim is to give students a safe, quick way to practise and notice common fraction patterns.
Who Is This Game For?
This game is suitable for primary school students who are learning or revising basic fractions.
It may be helpful for students who need practice with:
Making equivalent fractions
Simplifying fractions
Adding fractions with the same denominator
Adding fractions with different denominators
Subtracting fractions
Handling mixed numbers
Borrowing in mixed-number subtraction
It can also be useful for older students who still feel shaky with fraction basics. There is no shame in revising foundations. In fact, many secondary school math problems become much easier when fraction skills are stronger.
How Parents Can Use This Game at Home
Parents can use this game as a short practice activity.
A simple way to use it:
Let your child play one round.
Ask which questions felt difficult.
Look at the worked steps together.
Replay another round if your child is still fresh.
Stop before it becomes frustrating.
For most students, one or two short rounds are enough. The goal is steady practice, not turning the game into fraction boot camp.
A Small Note for Students
Getting a question wrong is not a disaster.
Fractions become easier when you start noticing patterns:
Same denominator → add or subtract the top numbers.
Different denominator → make the bottom numbers the same first.
Mixed numbers → handle the whole numbers and fractions carefully.
Borrowing → stay calm and convert 1 whole into a fraction.
That last one is where many students panic. CT-1 also panics. So at least you are not alone.
Try the Game Above
Play one round and see how many kitchen orders you can help CT-1 complete.
Remember: this is practice, not a test. Take your time, use the hints, and look carefully at the worked answers after each question.
Fractions are not magic. They are just patterns wearing scary costumes.