Master math at light speed.
A premium math fluency game for K–8. Studyto learn. Cramto improve speed. Fill the mastery grid and make math automatic.
See how it works
Preview the Game
Explore the interactive cube to see what makes Velocity Learning different. Drag to rotate and discover each feature.
How Velocity Learning works
Short sessions. Smart repetition. Real math fluency.
Timed practice
Speed matters. You're training automatic recall — not slow guessing.
Target weak facts
Study mode repeats what you miss until it sticks permanently.
Track mastery
The mastery grid makes progress obvious and motivating, day by day.
- Build speed and confidence with timed reps
- See exactly what's mastered in the grid
- Turn weak spots into strengths fast
What parents are saying
Real feedback from families using math fluency practice.
What Velocity builds in your brain
Not just "knowing" math — but fast recall, strong foundations, and confidence under time.
Mental math gets faster
Daily timed practice makes answers come out instantly — perfect for tests and real life.
Confidence under pressure
When facts are automatic, students stop freezing and start flowing.
Better algebra readiness
Fluency with operations makes higher-level math easier: fractions, equations, and word problems.
FAQ
Common questions about timed math practice, the mastery grid, and building speed for K–8 students.
What is a math fluency game, and why does it matter?
Math fluency means answering quickly and accurately without needing to count or guess. Velocity Learning trains automatic recall through timed practice so students improve mental math speed and confidence.
Does Velocity Learning cover addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division?
Yes. The mastery grid supports addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division so students can build a complete foundation across core operations for K–8 math.
How long should students practice timed math each day?
Most students improve with 10–15 minutes per day. Short sessions keep focus high and create faster progress than long, inconsistent practice.
What's the difference between Study Mode and Cram Mode?
Study Mode is for learning and repetition — it targets weak facts and builds accuracy. Cram Mode is for speed training — timed runs push fast recall and streak consistency.
How can parents or teachers track progress?
The mastery grid is designed for quick visibility: what's mastered, what's in progress, and what's locked. It makes math progress easy to monitor for parents, teachers, and tutors.