Math, but fast.
Hands on.
Screens off.
A 2–5 player tile race where kids build real equations as quickly as they can. Bananagrams meets PEMDAS. The table gets messy. The thinking gets sharp.
Four rules. One messy table.
Numeros works in 90 seconds. Then your kids will play it for an hour without realizing they're doing math.
Grab 15 tiles
Each player pulls 15 tiles — numbers (0–9) and the operators (+ − × ÷ =).
Everyone goes
No turns. No waiting. The whole table thinks at once. The quiet kids get loud.
Build equations
Real PEMDAS. Order of operations applies. Stuck? Discard one — but draw two.
Call it
First to use all their tiles calls it out. Everyone draws more. Round continues.
The math game that doesn't feel like one.
Fast, not patient.
No turns. Everyone plays at once. The energy keeps kids in 20-minute rounds, not 5. The 7-year-old keeps up with the 11-year-old.
Real PEMDAS.
Order of operations, equation-building, fluency under pressure. The math is honest — just disguised as a race for tiles.
Hands on. Screens off.
Substantial tiles, kitchen-table chaos. The kind of game you want left out on the counter, not hidden in a closet.
"7 times 3 equals 21." Out loud. By a 9-year-old. Voluntarily.
Numeros doesn't ask kids to do math. It asks them to win. The math is what wins.
"My son discarded a tile, drew two, and immediately built (2+8) × 5. He's eight. I'm still trying to figure out when this happened."
Everything you need. Nothing you don't.
Tiles total
Numbers (0–9), operators (+ − × ÷ =), and parens. Substantial — not flimsy.
Tiles per player
Enough to build long equations. Few enough to stay fast.
Players
From a quiet two-player session to a full-table family round.
Equations
The board never plays the same way twice. PEMDAS keeps it deep.
Loud kids. Quiet relief.
"I have been trying to convince my third grader that multiplication is interesting for two years. Numeros did it in twenty minutes."
"Bought it for my niece. Played it with my niece. Bought a second one for ourselves. The whole table thinks at once — that's the trick."
"My homeschool kids ask to play this instead of doing their math worksheets. So we're calling that math worksheets, and we're done."