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Launched in 1998, [2] [3] it was the first NASA website to create content about multiple missions directly for children. It has its own url, and it also serves as the kids' portion of the NASA Science Mission Directorate website. [4] The site includes informative articles, hands-on activities, and interactive web games.
The Fun Arcade is a collection of 25 fun games, though only 13 are available and currently running. It has games such as Pig Toss, Mighty Guy/Girl (depending on the gender of the player) and Planetary Pinball. Playground. A collection of 24 games and activities aimed at younger kids, it has significantly easier games like Helipopper and Desert ...
A few years ago, NASA held a research challenge looking for a developer and game proposal for an educational, space-themed video game that could not only be extremely educational, but also fun and ...
The game was in development for "iPhone, PC and select consoles," with an estimated release date of 2012. [1] By November 2012, Project Whitecard and Wisdom Tools had received $750,000 in funding from the Canada Media Fund. [6] In March 2014, the game's title was changed to Starlite: Astronaut Academy. Project Whitecard intended to release ...
They brainstormed and created the basic structure of the event to be both a design competition and a management simulation game. Gale and Dick Edwards wrote the materials for the game. The first Space Settlement Design Competition was conducted at Ohio State University in August 1984, with approximately 75 participants.
Experience Curiosity is an interactive web application developed by NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory to celebrate the third anniversary of the Curiosity rover landing on Mars. [1] This 3D serious game [ 2 ] makes it possible to operate the rover, control its cameras and the robotic arm and reproduces some of the prominent events of the Mars ...
Spacewar! is a space combat video game developed in 1962 by Steve Russell in collaboration with Martin Graetz, Wayne Wiitanen, Bob Saunders, Steve Piner, and others.It was written for the newly installed DEC PDP-1 minicomputer at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
A New York City FIRST Robotics Team at a Greater DC Regional with their robot (Hunter College High School-3419). 3,304 teams from 31 countries competed in 2023 Charged Up.Of these, 3,036 are "veteran teams" (meaning they have competed in a previous season), and 268 are "rookie teams" (meaning that 2023 was their first season of competition).