Compare two prices for the same item quantity and pick the better value. Introduces unit price thinking for grades 3–5. Practice finding the best deal by calculating price per item.

Choose your game mode (Timed Challenge or Practice) and difficulty level.
Two deals appear for the same item — for example '4 apples for $2.00' vs '6 apples for $3.60'.
Decide which deal gives you a lower price per item (the better value).
Tap or click the deal you think is the best value.
The game reveals the unit price for both deals and tells you if you were right.
In Timed mode, answer as many as you can before time runs out!
Build streaks of correct answers for bonus motivation.
After the game, review your score and try to beat your high score.
Side-by-Side Deal Comparison
Two deals for the same item are shown side by side — different quantities at different prices. Pick the one with the lower unit price to score!
Unit Price Reveal
After each choice, the game reveals the exact unit price for both deals, teaching players to think in terms of cost per item.
Three Difficulty Levels
Easy mode uses obvious price differences. Medium makes it closer. Hard uses tricky decimals where the better deal isn't immediately obvious.
Timed and Practice Modes
Race against the clock in 60-second Timed Challenge mode, or take your time in Practice mode to build confidence with unit pricing.
Streak Tracking
Build a streak of correct answers! The game tracks your current streak and best streak, rewarding consistent smart shopping.
Best Deal Finder is a math game that teaches unit price comparison — a critical real-world skill for smart shopping. Players see two deals for the same item (e.g., '6 juice boxes for $4.50' vs '8 juice boxes for $5.60') and must determine which offers the lower price per item. The game builds the habit of thinking about value rather than just total price, an essential concept introduced in grades 3–5 math curricula.
Unit Price Thinking
Teaches unit price thinking — a practical skill used every time you shop and compare products on store shelves.
Division & Comparison Skills
Builds division and comparison skills in a meaningful real-world context that students immediately relate to.
Busts the 'Bigger is Better' Myth
Helps students understand that 'more items' doesn't always mean 'better deal' — sometimes the smaller package is cheaper per item.
Progressive Difficulty
Three difficulty levels ensure appropriate challenge from grade 3 through grade 5, scaling from obvious to very close unit prices.
Pressure-Free Practice Mode
Practice mode allows focused learning without time pressure, building confidence before attempting timed challenges.
Streak-Based Motivation
Streak tracking encourages accuracy and careful thinking over speed, rewarding consistent correct answers.
The game is designed for grades 3–5. Easy mode works for grade 3 students just learning about division and unit price. Hard mode challenges grade 5 students with tricky decimals that require careful calculation.
Divide the total price by the number of items to get the unit price (price per item). The deal with the lower unit price is the better value. For example: $3.00 ÷ 6 = $0.50 each vs $2.20 ÷ 4 = $0.55 each — the first deal is better!
Easy: obvious differences, small quantities (2–5 items). Medium: closer unit prices, larger quantities, requires more careful comparison. Hard: very close unit prices with tricky decimals — you really need to calculate!
No! That's one of the key lessons. Sometimes a smaller package has a lower price per item. The game deliberately mixes it up so players learn to always calculate rather than assume.
You earn 1 point for each correct answer (picking the deal with the lower unit price). Your final score is the total number of correct comparisons.
The streak counts how many correct answers you've given in a row. If you answer incorrectly, it resets to zero. It encourages careful thinking over hasty guessing.