Kids know when it is fake.
The game has to be a real RPG first: gear, zones, battles, quests, friends, and progress that feels earned.
A note from Adrian
I love stories, I love games, and I think the best games make hard things feel worth trying. Infinilearn is my attempt to give math that same pull.
Infinilearn should feel like it was made by people who actually love games, not by a worksheet company wearing a fantasy hat.
Free game · No ads · Grades 5 to 9The why
I am Adrian Martinez, a high school student in Orange County, California. I was the kid bringing too many books to class, ignoring homework, and caring way more about the story I was in than the worksheet in front of me.
I built Minecraft server mods that reached one million views when I was 11. A couple years later I got my first VR headset, pulled my first all-nighter, and never really stopped thinking about how worlds can make people care. I own 13 headsets now, which is probably too many, but also exactly enough to explain the problem.
Infinilearn is built from that obsession. Kids deserve math practice that feels alive. Parents and teachers deserve clear data they can trust. The goal is simple: make math feel like something worth entering, not something to survive.
What we believe
The game has to be a real RPG first: gear, zones, battles, quests, friends, and progress that feels earned.
Math is not a side popup. It is how players attack, unlock, craft, grow stronger, and move the story forward.
Parents and teachers should see clear progress by topic, standards, strengths, weak spots, and real activity.
No ads, no pay-to-play math content, no open chat, and no selling student data. The game stays safe and focused.
For parents and teachers
Ready for the first quest?