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The board game is designed to teach basic programming principles via a series of instruction cards which move the players’ pieces (turtles) around the board.
Now on Kickstarter, Robot Turtles is a new board game designed by a Google executive that teaches kids who can't even read the logic of programming.
In a big win for a crowd-funded business, Dan Shapiro's board game to teach kids to code will be sold by the national retailer. It was a simple idea. Dan Shapiro needed something fun to do with ...
With a new board game called Robot Turtles, preschoolers can learn the basics of computer programming. Ariel Zambelich/WIRED All products featured on Wired are independently selected by our editors.
I walked right past ol' Turbo Turtle dozens of times, always assuming it was yet another wasteful GBA slop bucket of game code.
Turtle Rock may have started development on Back 4 Blood 2, assuming the code names for its horror games don’t change between projects. An eager sleuth at Multiplayer1st did some digging into ...
Robot Turtles, the board game invented by Seattle software entrepreneur Dan Shapiro that teaches kids how to code, is now available at Target stores.
Google is marking the 50th anniversary of kids learning computer programming language with its first-ever Google doodle that doubles as a coding game.
Robot Turtles is a tabletop board game that teaches children as young as 3 years old the fundamentals of computer programming. Entrepreneur Dan Shapiro came up with the idea while playing with his ...
Shapiro, the father of 4-year-old twins, is creating a new board game called Robot Turtles, which he notes “sneakily teaches programming fundamentals” to those between the ages of three to eight.