A physicist, a gamer and two editors walk into a bar. No, this isn’t the setup for some joke. After work one night, a few Science News staffers tried out a new board game, Subatomic. This ...
Zach Thammavongsy, a postdoctoral fellow studying inorganic chemistry at California’s Chapman University, is gaming the chemistry education system. And the Newscripts gang is loving it. No, he’s not ...
Games don’t make you smarter, but they can support your brain, regardless of your age. Different games sharpen different ...
Educational games in chemistry have emerged as a dynamic tool to support and enhance the teaching and learning experience. These interactive approaches integrate digital, online and board game formats ...
2-4 players can play this game Six-sided die (or a digital simulator) The game board on this page One token per player (coins, beads, seeds, lentils, etc.) ...
You are deep underground in a lab that once housed some of the finest minds in chemistry. But robots directed by a crackbrained artificial intelligence have taken it over and plan to use its equipment ...