⛳Integer Golf LIVE
PGA-style multiplayer mini golf for integer arithmetic
Play through 18 holes of top-down mini golf in parallel against your classmates. Birdie = −1, par = 0, bogey = +1 — the running net total adds positive and negative integers across the course. Live PGA-style leaderboard shows everyone's current hole and net score. Most negative score wins.
- •18 holes — increasing difficulty
- •Live PGA-style leaderboard (lowest net wins)
- •15-minute round timer
- •Reading the leaderboard IS integer arithmetic — order from −5 to +7 on the fly
Host a live game
No difficulty knob — every kid plays the same 18-hole course in parallel. Lowest net wins.
Sets the round timer. Choose what fits your lesson block.
You'll get a 6-letter code to share. Students join from any device — phone, iPad, laptop — no app or login needed.
Already got a code?
Type it here — works for any of the live games.
How this works as a classroom game
Integer Golf LIVE turns mini golf into a multiplayer integer-arithmetic tournament. Every student plays through 18 holes in parallel; the projector shows a live PGA-style leaderboard with each player's current hole and net score (under or over par). Most negative net wins — the running scoreboard IS the maths.
Set-up (60 seconds)
Teacher creates a room, shares the 6-letter code. Up to 40 students join from any device — phone, iPad, laptop — and tee off the moment the host clicks START. No login, no app, no individual difficulty settings — same 18-hole course for everyone.
PGA-style scoring
Birdie = −1, par = 0, bogey = +1, double bogey = +2. The leaderboard shows everyone's current hole and net score in real time. Most negative wins. Reading the leaderboard — ordering −5, −3, 0, +2, +6 — is itself integer-arithmetic practice every minute of the session.
15-minute timer
Round ends after 15 minutes regardless of progress. Lowest net wins; tiebreak is further through the course. Students who finish all 18 early sit on their final net; the room doesn't end early so everyone gets the full time.
Curriculum alignment
Adding and subtracting positive and negative integers in a context students actually care about. The running net total forces students to add a +2 to a −3 across every hole — and crucially, to compare negative numbers when reading the leaderboard. Aligned to AC v9 Year 6–7 (AC9M6N01, AC9M7N02) and US Common Core 6.NS.C.5, 6.NS.C.7, 7.NS.A.1.
Student experience
More leisurely than the maze games — students take 20–60 seconds per shot, thinking about angle and power. The PGA framing creates real social dynamics: kids watch the leaderboard between shots, see who's flirting with the lead, plan whether to play for par or risk a hole-in-one. Sessions hold attention for the full 15 minutes because every player has 18 holes to work through.
How it compares to Blooket and Kahoot
Nothing else in the multiplayer maths-game category looks like this. Blooket and Kahoot do quiz-and-answer; Integer Golf is continuous gameplay where every action (every shot, every leaderboard glance) is integer arithmetic. The PGA leaderboard format reads as familiar to kids who watch sport at home — and the negative scoring convention finally makes intuitive sense in a context they recognise.
Pairs well with
- Integer Golf (solo) — single-player version for individual practice
- AC9M6N01 — Year 6 integers — the AC v9 standard this targets
- All Arcade LIVE games — the rest of the multiplayer library