Not really a game (Suprise!) But it's kinda cool.
EDIT:
The decimal point should work better now...no repeating crap that fills the whole screen and stuff like that. So yay
Old comment:
This be the third calculator. Using a round-about way, I finally got the decimal button to (kinda) work in a way decimal buttons (kinda) work. Type your number in, then move the decimal point this way or that depending on which button you press. [<== .] Will send your decimal to the left, and ultimately dividing your number by 10, and [==> .] does just the opposite. I know its a pain the the *at dollar dollar* but it (kinda) works.
Also some buttons are colorful; yay to not color-blindness!
Old comment:
Behold the second coming of calculator! It's sleeker, more efficient, and makes you want to marry your computer. Yes it does...don't lie.
Anyway, the decimal place still doesn't work (and therefore the arcsine and arccossine function don't work that well), but look at all the BUTTONS! That's over 700 lines of code in front of your face!
Quick thing. When doing trig, the first number input is the multiplier, the second number is the one that actually goes into the function. So pressing "9" "tan" "3" "=" returns 9 x tan(3).
Try it, in degree mode it should come up as 0.47167.
Old comment:
Woohoo I made a calculator! The decimal place doesn't work, but screw it, it's 10:30 and I'm done enough.