Look at a real floor plan and it's rarely one clean rectangle — it's an L-shape, a room with an alcove, a yard with a shed cut out. The trick is the same every time: break it into rectangles you can do, then add (or subtract).
Split, Solve, Add
The L-shaped room in the toy is just two rectangles. Draw one line to split it, find each rectangle's area, and add them: Rectangle A + Rectangle B = total. Or think of it as the big rectangle minus the bite taken out — same answer. Drag the shape and watch the running total update.
Working Backwards
Sometimes you're handed the area and asked for a missing side. A rectangular room covers 30 m² and is 6 m long — how wide is it? Start from Area = length × width: 30 = 6 × width, so width = 30 ÷ 6 = 5 m. Multiplying built the area; dividing undoes it. Flip on the reverse challenge in the toy to feel this — you adjust the shape to hit a target area.
Why This Is the Finish Line
Counting squares was the "aha". Width × height made it quick. Telling area from perimeter made it safe. But splitting a real, messy shape and running the formula backwards — that's the bit that shows up when you're tiling a bathroom, turfing a yard, or sitting an exam. That's mastery.