Explore the worlds within worlds that surround us every day, but usually go unnoticed by the human eye through gamified learning.
After a lab test gone wrong giant ants, a protist and even fungi are taking over the city and it’s on you to use science to your advantage and clean up the whole mess before anyone notices. On your adventure, you’re joined by STEVE, the lab’s AI assistant, and will be the first to try out his newest invention, Shrink-o-gen. Scanning and scaling your way through the environment over the course of 4 missions, you’ll learn about the different rules that apply to each realm - molecular, bacterial, insect, human, and mountain.
In addition to the base game, there’s also a Multiplayer Theater where you can watch your favorite 2D Kurzgesagt videos in a whole new way with friends. And in case that’s not enough - you can even bring objects and creatures you collected in-game to life in the comfort of your own home via the Mixed Reality Sandbox.
Mixed reality | |
comfort | ⦾ Comfortable |
age rating | 0+ Everyone |
website | kurzgesagt.org |
developer | Schell Games, in a nutshell - kurzgesagt |
publisher | Meta |
connection | Internet required |
app version | 0.0.1+324413s |
languages | English |
Game was a little to short
I glitchy out the video hub 4 infinit time limit just watch unlocked videos and you had infinit time / problematic because kids play the game
At first it was kinda hard but then it started to get easier as you learnt your way to the end of the game.
The game is good but it should have a bit more content or some sort of endless content thing
The game is a little bit glitchy but it’s fun and it teaches kids like me a lot and the quests are very fun. Honestly if you gave this to your child they would probably not know it was a game that taught you stuff and they would enjoy it a lot
Explore different size scales, and learn more about microscopic living beings. The art style is exactly like the videos, and it’s a lot of fun.
Scaling things to vastly different sizes isn’t really that scientific, and they wouldn’t keep working the same way they originally do. And grouping into km, m, mm, micro-m, and nm scales is sometimes a bit simplistic, and many objects don’t nearly fit into any category. But it gets the picture across, and it is a nice way of exploring some of the science.