CASHIER GAME
💰 Click money buttons to select📱 Tap money buttons to select
Controls
Game Overview
Cashier Game puts you behind the register in a bustling store where customers expect their change fast and correct. Each round presents a product price and the amount the customer paid, and you must assemble the exact change using the available coins and bills. One wrong submission and your shift is over. The real depth comes from the PERFECT bonus system: returning change using the fewest possible coins and bills earns significantly more points. This transforms a simple math exercise into an optimization puzzle under time pressure. It is an excellent brain trainer disguised as an arcade game, perfect for sharpening mental arithmetic and decision-making skills.
How to Play
🎯 Objective: Give the exact change to each customer before they lose patience.
🎮 Controls: Click money buttons to select coins and bills, then click GIVE to submit your change.
📋 Rules: One mistake and it's game over! Score equals the product price for each correct answer. Use minimum coins for a PERFECT bonus!
Tips & Strategies
- 1.Calculate the change amount in your head before touching any buttons. Rushing to tap coins leads to counting errors.
- 2.Always start with the largest denomination that fits. This naturally leads to the minimum coin count for PERFECT bonuses.
- 3.Double-check your selected total against the required change before hitting GIVE. There is no undo after submission.
- 4.Practice common change-making patterns offline. Recognizing amounts like 75 cents instantly as three quarters speeds up gameplay.
Scoring System
Each correct change submission scores points equal to the product price for that transaction. Achieving a PERFECT rating by using the minimum number of coins and bills earns a substantial bonus on top. A single incorrect submission ends the game, so your final score reflects both speed and accuracy across all completed transactions.
Frequently Asked Questions
What exactly is a PERFECT bonus?
A PERFECT bonus is awarded when you give the correct change using the absolute minimum number of coins and bills possible. For example, giving 50 cents as two quarters is PERFECT, while giving it as five dimes is correct but not optimal.
Does the difficulty increase with each customer?
Yes, later customers tend to have trickier price points that require more complex change calculations. The amounts paid may also become less convenient, forcing you to work with awkward change totals under increasing time pressure.
Is there a time limit for each customer?
Yes, each customer has a patience timer. If you take too long to submit the change, the customer leaves and the game ends. Working quickly is important, but accuracy matters more since one mistake is also game over.
