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Scratch is a high-level, block-based visual programming language and website aimed primarily at children as an educational tool, with a target audience of ages 8 to 16. [9] [10] Users on the site can create projects on the website using a block-like interface.
The game's community took up the game and kept updating and porting the game via a GitHub repository under a GPL license. [147] [148] Friday the 13th: The Game: 2017 2021 Various Survival horror: IIIFonic, Black Tower Studios: Partial Unreal Engine project leaked via Google Drive on 2 December 2021. Frogger (1997) 1997 2023 PlayStation, Windows ...
Scratch: The Ultimate DJ was a music video game announced by Genius Products in 2008. Similarly to Konami 's Beatmania series, it would have employed a specialized turntable controller (called the "Scratch Deck"), which would have allowed the player to follow along to the rhythm game while simulating common DJ techniques, such as scratching.
The Singing Bee (American game show) The Singing Bee (Australian game show) The Singing Bee (Philippine game show) Sounds Like Music; Spicks and Specks (TV series) Spot the Tune; Stop the Music (American game show) Stop the Music (Australian TV series) Studio El Fan; Superfan (American game show)
Keykit, a programming language and portable graphical environment for MIDI music composition; Kyma (sound design language) LilyPond, a computer program and file format for music engraving. Max/MSP, a proprietary, modular visual programming language aimed at sound synthesis for music; Mercury, a language for live-coding algorithmic music.
(formerly Build Your Own Blocks) is a free block-based educational graphical programming language and online community. Snap allows students to explore, create, and remix interactive animations, games, stories, and more, while learning about mathematical and computational ideas. While inspired by Scratch, Snap! has many
A programming game is a video game that incorporates elements of computer programming, enabling the player to direct otherwise autonomous units within the game to follow commands in a domain-specific programming language, often represented as a visual language to simplify the programming metaphor. Programming games broadly fall into two areas ...
An algorave (from an algorithm and rave) is an event where people dance to music generated from algorithms, often using live coding techniques. [1] Alex McLean of Slub and Nick Collins coined the word "algorave" in 2011, and the first event under such a name was organised in London, England. [2]