Roman Town by Dig It! Games is an computer game that allows children and adults to oversee an archaeological dig, manage a team of diggers, and experience the thrill of uncovering ancient objects, all while learning about ancient Roman art, architecture, language, history, and culture.
This interactive, educational game targets 5th to 8th graders, but will likely be enjoyed by those both younger and older. The game does require players to be able to read fluently, so younger children, although able to play and learn from the game, will need assistance with the required reading.
Roman Town players assign workers to use hoes, pics, and trowels to dig the excavation site.
When artifacts are uncovered, they are identified and their uses explained by animated children dressed in authentic ancient Roman costume.
After a number of items have been uncovered and artifacts defined and described, players engage in an assortment of entertaining and educational games that serve to reinforce what they have learned.
At the conclusion of a level, players visit the Roman Town Lab to further explore their findings, and learn even more about Roman history and Roman culture.
Each level concludes with a report. Players fill in the blanks with Roman vocabulary to demonstrate mastery of the information in that level. There are six levels of fun and learning in Roman Town. The game allows individual accounts to be set up for each player in the family, a definite plus!
My boys both thoroughly enjoyed their Roman Town experience. Ryan (age 9) learned a great deal about ancient Rome, its people and its culture, by playing the game and reading the information provided after each artifact was uncovered. He quickly progressed through the six levels of the game, and then started again to explore and learn even more. Connor (age 7) found the reading required by this program extremely challenging, but still enjoyed digging for artifacts and playing the games that required less reading, such as the puzzle completion games. He did not want me or his brother to sit and read the information presented to him, and so his overall experience was not nearly as rich as his brother’s.
Even so, I found Dig It! Games’ Roman Town to be an incredible mix of fun and learning! I would like to see a voice module added to the game in future editions, but otherwise, it is a great program as is. A voice module (to read the information presented) would have made Connor’s experience with the game more educational and less game-playing, and would have likely enhanced Ryan’s experience as even he had difficulty with pronunciations for some of the Roman vocabulary terms, but most fifth through eighth graders, the program’s intended target group, would have no problem reading the information presented. It’s just this game is so much fun that I’d love to see it more accessible for younger children!
Dig It! Games’ Roman Town sells for $39.95. Now through February 21, 2011, however, you may purchase this game for only $19.96 by using the coupon code TOS2011. What a savings! Roman Town is available on CD-ROM for PC only. A MAC version is, hopefully, coming soon.
I received Dig It! Games’ Roman Town free for the purpose of reviewing it. I received no other compensation for this review. The opinions expressed in this review are my honest opinions. Your experience may vary.
I have a dream, the dream of packing our wagon and heading west on the adventure of a lifetime. I have been fascinated by the Westward Movement, the Frontier, and of course, the Little House on the Prairie, for as long as I can remember, and so when I learned I would receive a product…
My fourth grader is a visual learner. He learns best when he can clearly see relationships between and within the concepts he is learning. He’s good in math, and fractions seem to make sense to him, provided he can visualize the fraction in his mind. As a result, he enjoyed manipulating and working with the…
When in the Course of human events it becomes necessary for one people to dissolve the political bands which have connected them with another and to assume among the powers of the earth, the separate and equal station to which the Laws of Nature and of Nature’s God entitle them, a decent respect to…
My boys LOVE to spend time on the computer. At seven and nine, their mobility on-line is, however, severely restricted and constantly monitored. There are a handful of websites they may visit, and many that are off-limits. For the most part, they are good about visiting only the approved websites, but not always. There is…
“I can read! I can read! I can spell and I can read!” This happy chorus was heard repeatedly in our home this week as the secrets of reading were finally unlocked for our seven year old! It was indeed a joyous moment as Connor enthusiastically read book after book after book with an ear-to-ear…
After hours of Star Wars viewing, and even more hours of loud and active light saber battling, my boys couldn’t contain their excitement upon hearing of a Cub Scout Go-See-It entitled Swordsmen Rendezvous! Swordplay was a must-know skill for every 18th century gentlemen, and Gadsby’s Tavern in Alexandria, Virgina was a center of social and…