Division Facts Game for Families Online | MathIt
Real-time multiplayer

Turn Division Fact Practice Into Fast Family Math Battles

Challenge parents and kids in quick multiplayer rounds that build faster division fact recall together at home.

MathIt makes division fact practice feel like a family game night instead of another worksheet. Parents and children can join the same room, race to solve division problems in real time, and build quicker recall together through short, exciting rounds. It’s an easy way for families to practice division facts side by side, whether you’re helping a learner gain confidence or turning math time into friendly competition.

2-5 players • 30-second rounds • 3 difficulty levels • 20 languages

How It Works

Three steps to math glory

1

Create Room

Pick a difficulty and create a private room

2

Share Code

Send the room code or QR to your friends

3

Compete!

Solve equations fastest to claim victory

Features

Everything you need for the ultimate math showdown

100% Free to Play

All core features are free. Multiplayer battles, difficulty levels, leaderboards, and 20 languages included.

30-Second Rounds

Fast-paced timed challenges. Equations advance every 10 seconds — solve them before time runs out!

Real-Time Multiplayer

Compete with 2-5 players simultaneously in real-time math battles. Every millisecond counts!

Ready to Battle?

Free to play. Available now on iOS and Android.

Optional ad-free subscription: $0.99/mo or $5.99/yr

Frequently Asked Questions

Is MathIt free to play?
Yes! MathIt is completely free to download and play on both iOS and Android. All core features are included. An optional ad-free subscription is available for $0.99/month or $5.99/year.
How many players can play MathIt?
MathIt supports 2 to 5 players in real-time multiplayer math battles. Create a room, share the 6-character code with friends, and compete head-to-head.
What math operations are included?
MathIt includes addition, subtraction, multiplication, division, square roots, and powers. Easy and Medium focus on addition and subtraction, while Hard adds multiplication, division, and mixed operations.

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