Brain Quest

Brain Quest is a series of educational flashcards that quiz children on a variety of subjects including science, math, English, geography, history, and others.

Versions

The product was created by the French company Play Bac, and was named Les P'tits Incollables. The English version was named Brain Quest and licensed to Workman Publishing. It sold 4.2 million copies in its first 16 months,[1] and made the New York Times Bestseller list for children's books.[2]

Brain Quest is primarily intended for school children from grades 1 through 7. However, some card sets are geared towards younger toddlers.

Rock Flipper

The Rock Flipper game allows two people to participate at the same time. One player is tasked with reading the question and withholding the answer from the opponent. Although slightly competitive, there is no scoring system for the game, making it more family-friendly and focused on learning.

Turbo Twist

LeapFrog Enterprises designed and released a special Turbo Twist handheld toy that is based on the Brain Quest license. It features voice acting for the franchise's characters Jason and Anna, as well as their dog BQ. Similar to the original flashcard product, the player must answer multiple choice questions based on science, social studies and/or language arts, by "Twisting" the end of the unit to select answers and "Slamming" a button to choose the correct one when it is displayed. The player can choose from ten levels of difficulty and also encounter questions from all three categories, called the "Grab Bag", like in the original flash card game.

gollark: I don't think it's there by default.
gollark: Bacteria of some kind turn lactose in milk into lactic acid.
gollark: Maybe. I've not really investigated it much.
gollark: For some weird reason minty toothpaste makes me feel a bad burning-y sensation which lasts for a while after I use it, which seems like the opposite of the usual behavior.
gollark: Why would you *keep* that rice?

References

  1. Neher, Jacques (1993-11-08). "Teasing Brains for Fun and Profit". International Herald Tribune. Archived from the original on 2009-01-28. Retrieved 2009-01-28.
  2. "Children's Best Sellers". New York Times. 1994-05-22. Archived from the original on 2012-07-29. Retrieved 2009-01-28.


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