Price Games offers many ways to test your pricing instincts — solo, against bots, or live against friends in multiplayer rooms. Every mode is free, with no signup required.
Guess the exact price of each product
How to play: Each round shows one real product. Type your guess — the closer your guess is to the actual price, the more points you score. Five or ten rounds, no timer.
Strategy tip: Start with rough price anchoring: is it a "cents," "tens," or "hundreds" item? Then tune. Price Games is forgiving — being within 10% earns most of the available points.
Is the real price higher or lower?
How to play: You see a product with its real price, then a second product. Decide whether the second one costs more or less than the first. Repeat.
Strategy tip: Compare the shelf archetype, not just the photo. Two similar-looking items can have a 10× price gap based on brand or material.
Which product costs more (or less)?
How to play: Two products, side by side. Pick the more expensive one (or the cheaper one — the prompt flips each round).
Strategy tip: Read the prompt carefully every round — 'which is cheaper?' reversals are the #1 source of missed points.
Guess close — but stay under the real price!
How to play: Type a guess that's as close to the real price as possible — but if you go over, you score zero for that round.
Strategy tip: Under-bid deliberately. A $1 low is always worth more than a $1 high.
Match 4 products to their correct prices
How to play: Four products and four prices. Drag each price onto the right product before time runs out.
Strategy tip: Anchor the cheapest and most expensive first, then solve the middle two by elimination.
Stop the rising price before it goes over!
How to play: A single price counter ticks upward. Stop it with a tap — the closer you land to the real price without going over, the more you score.
Strategy tip: Tap slightly before you think the real price is — reaction lag is usually ~100ms.
Find the product that doesn't match the price group
How to play: Four products. Three share a price tier (roughly comparable). Pick the outlier — the one that doesn't belong.
Strategy tip: Don't trust size. A small high-end gadget often costs more than a bulky basic one.
Estimate the total cost of a basket of products
How to play: A basket of up to six products. Estimate the combined total — no per-item breakdown.
Strategy tip: Sum rough tiers: how many "$10-ish" items, how many "$50-ish"? Faster than computing per-item prices.
Rank the products from cheapest to most expensive
How to play: Five products. Drag them into a ranked list from cheapest on top to most expensive on bottom.
Strategy tip: Place the extremes first, then place the middle items relative to each other.
Pick items that fit within the given budget
How to play: Six products, one budget. Select the combination that fills the budget as fully as possible without going over.
Strategy tip: Knapsack-style: prefer adding cheap items last to fill remainder, rather than starting with a luxury item you can't afford.
Build a chain of products by ascending price
How to play: Five products. Build a chain where each product costs more than the previous one. Each correct step extends the chain.
Strategy tip: When unsure of two middle items, place the one you're most confident on and let the chain constrain the rest.
Bid in turns — closest without going over wins!
How to play: Players bid in turns on a single product's price. Closest under the real price wins — over bids score zero.
Strategy tip: Late bidders should bid $1 over the leading bid when they think the leader was too low.