 This game, Pizza Supremo allows you to use your knowledge of fractions to claim as many pizzas as you can. The materials needed for this game include the Pizza Supremo Game Board and a Page Protector, two six-sided dice, a different color dry erase marker for each player, and an eraser. Scrap paper can be used if a player needs help finding equivalent fractions. The object of this game is for players to understand how to break apart fractions in order to claim the most pieces of pizza. On your turn you will roll two dice. Make a fraction with the number you roll. The value of the fraction must be less than or equal to one. Here are some examples of possible fractions you could roll. If you roll a one into six, the fraction that is less than or equal to one is one six. If you roll a two and a three, the fraction is two thirds since three over two is greater than one. If you roll two threes, the fraction is three over three which is equivalent to one. On your turn roll the dice and make a fraction that is less than or equal to one from that roll. Color in one or more pizzas so that the parts you colored add up to the fraction you rolled. A player claims a pizza if the player colors more than half of it. Playing the game. The blue player rolled one and a four so the fraction is one fourth. The blue player can shade a total area of one fourth of a pizza. Next the blue player rolled a six and a four so the fraction is four sixth. The blue player has a few options. The blue player can color four sixth of a pizza or can split the fraction in order to color parts of more pizzas. The blue player can either shade four one six pieces, two one third pieces or one one half piece and one one six piece. A player will need to determine which it will be more beneficial to them in order to claim the most pizzas. Players continue taking turns and filling in pizzas. The red player rolls two fives. It can either shade a full pizza or break the whole into fractions that add up to one. The red player decides to shade two thirds of a pizza and one third of another pizza because two thirds plus one third equals one whole pizza. The game ends when there are no more pizzas to claim. The player who claims the most pizza wins the game. Once the board is filled players determine a winner. If a pizza is claimed equally by two or more players no player can claim this pizza. In this game the red player has claimed eight pizzas and the blue player has claimed seven so the red player wins the game. Some questions that can facilitate discussions. Is it better to color one sixth of a pizza or one half of a pizza? What fractions are equivalent to the fraction you rolled? Can fractions be broken into smaller fractions? How? Suppose you roll a five and a six. What parts of a pizza can you claim? Suppose you roll two fives. How can you claim the most pizzas?