
The first few days, we did the basic game, but once we’d figured out the game and were quite comfortable with it, we switched to the advanced game and haven’t looked back since. Then a little pop up appears, where you choose whether you want a Basic Game (smaller board with no “gadgets”) or an Advanced Game (bigger board with “gadgets”). It seems to assign you a different one each time, but it’s easy to just click a different one that you want to use for that session. We always played the game! There are a number of avatars shown on the bottom of the screen to choose from. When you first log in, you select either Start a New Game or Questions Only. It took a few rounds of going back and forth between the student account and the parent account for me to get the settings *just right* for Grasshopper to be able to actually answer the questions each time, but once I did we only used the student account from then forward. I only set up an account for Grasshopper, even though the suggested age range is 5-15, and I don’t regret that decision at all. You have to go through the parent account the first time, where you can easily set up child accounts. Words Rock is an online game, and it’s super easy to set up an account and log in. Let me tell you a little bit about the game. Grasshopper has been having so much fun practicing his language arts lessons the past few weeks with Words Rock Online from EdAlive. Disclosure: I received this complimentary product through the Homeschool Review Crew.
