Carbon Road Disc Bike A9 700C

The Lost Mind of Dr. Brain

This game, the third in the Dr. Brain series, begins with an explanation of the goal of the game — Dr Brain’s brain has been accidentally transferred into a lab rat and you need to restore it. To do this you must complete nine puzzle areas. (There are 3 levels of difficulty, which restore 5%,

This game, the third in the Dr. Brain series, begins with an explanation of the goal of the game — Dr Brain’s brain has been accidentally transferred into a lab rat and you need to restore it. To do this you must complete nine puzzle areas. (There are 3 levels of difficulty, which restore 5%, 10%, or 15% of a section of Dr. Brain’s brain.) The puzzles are designed to require “the combined efforts of your seven intelligences,” as detailed by Dr. Howard Garnder’s Theory of Multiple Intelligences: verbal/linguistic, logical/mathematical, visual/spatial, bodily/kinesthetic, musical, interpersonal, and intra-personal. While one activity requires mainly hand eye coordination, others involve more complex mathematical thinking and problem solving. For instance, players must navigate a three-dimensional maze using a two dimensional map, use a set of basic computer commands to direct a robot around a grid, build a replica of a 3-D block construction using a model which can be rotated, flip the switches on a system of train tracks in order to deliver requested marbles in the correct sequence, and develop a system for filing objects in order to recall which objects were placed where. Other puzzles involve moving letters around a grid to form words, placing and matching pictures of sign language letters in a grid, and rearranging eight bars of music to play a requested song. Once Dr. Brain’s brain is restored, the player visits Dream Land and solves a final series of puzzles.

Pricing: Save 18% with an annual plan (en)