Games for Change 2023-24 Game Design Challenge to Focus on Solutions to Climate Change

Game design program and competition organization Games for Change (G4C) has announced its 2023-24 Student Challenge for middle and high school students, focusing on social impact game design. The theme this year is solutions to climate change to promote "greener communities, healthy oceans, and eco-friendly fashion," the organization said.

For the first time, international as well as U.S. students aged 10 to 18 are welcome to submit. Also new this year, the Challenge will accept analog tabletop game submissions to expand accessibility for those who do not have broadband services or coding experience.

Educators can access free professional development resources now to teach students how to design games and learn collaboration, communication, coding, and computational thinking skills.

The competition opens in the beginning of January 2024 and closes in early April. Workshops for students by industry experts will also be held from mid-January to early April. Competition judging will be held from early April to mid-May, and finalists will be notified in the first half of May. An awards ceremony will be held toward the end of May.

"Competition winners will receive a $10,000 scholarship, and other winners receive prizes including technology, video games, and opportunities with leading game companies," the organization said.

Specific resources for each kind of submission include:

  • EcoRise, building stronger and greener communities by inspiring players to overcome a local sustainability challenge. Waste management, urban planning, or community action are some ideas.
  • OceanWise, ideas for cleaning up the oceans.
  • Recycle the Runway, incorporating ecologically responsible fashion choices.

For more information, visit the Games for Change Student Challenge page, and click on the Arcade link to view and play past winners' game projects.

"Youth bring unique perspectives and new ideas to solving climate challenges," said Kristi Hibler-Luton, senior director of school programs at EcoRise. "Youth activism continues to be at the forefront of climate advocacy, and we are excited to support students to harness their creativity to educate their communities about climate challenges and solutions through play and gamification."

About the Author

Kate Lucariello is a former newspaper editor, EAST Lab high school teacher and college English teacher.

Featured

  • abstract smartphone translucent screen displaying AI interface

    Apple Unveils Redesigned Siri AI

    At its recent Worldwide Developers Conference, Apple announced Siri AI, a redesigned version of its voice assistant that Apple describes in its own announcement as "a profoundly more capable and personal assistant." The update is intended to make Siri more conversational, more context-aware, and more useful across iPhone, iPad, Mac, Apple Watch, and Vision Pro.

  • closeup of hands using smartphone to talk with ai chatbot

    Novakid Launches AI App for English-Speaking Practice

    Novakid, an online English learning platform for children, has launched NovaPals, an AI-powered conversational app for independent English-speaking practice.

  • abstract agentic ai data streams

    Rubrik Brings Agentic AI to Its Flagship Cyber Resilience Platform

    Rubrik has introduced Rubrik AI, positioning the company's cyber resilience platform around agentic operations across data, identity, and AI infrastructure.

  • Wi-Fi icon on dark blue circuit background

    FCC to Conduct 'Top-to-Bottom' Review of E-Rate Program

    The FCC is laying the groundwork for a comprehensive review of its E-Rate program, the federal initiative that provides K–12 schools and public libraries with discounts on internet, WiFi, and telecommunications services to ensure equitable digital access.