Learn Your Way

We've built our mobile game development program around how people actually learn best - with choices, flexibility, and support that adapts to your schedule and learning style.

Learning Formats

  • Weekend Intensives
  • Evening Sessions
  • Self-Paced Online
  • Hybrid Combinations
  • Project-Based Learning
  • Peer Collaboration

Choose What Works for You

Weekend Deep Dives

Saturday morning sessions running from 9 AM to 3 PM. Perfect if you work during the week but can dedicate solid blocks of time on weekends. We cover major concepts in these longer sessions, with hands-on coding and immediate feedback.

Evening Study Groups

Tuesday and Thursday evenings, 7-9 PM. Smaller groups, more discussion-based. Great for working through problems together and getting different perspectives on game design challenges.

Online at Your Pace

Complete modules when it suits your schedule. All materials available 24/7, with weekly check-ins and monthly group calls. You still get instructor support, just on your timeline.

Mix and Match

Many students combine formats. Maybe online study during busy periods, then weekend sessions when you want more interaction. The program adapts to your changing needs throughout the eight months.

Starting August 2025, you can switch between formats as needed. Life changes, work gets busy, or sometimes you just want more social interaction - the program moves with you rather than against you.

How Flexibility Actually Works

Real examples of how students navigate the program while managing work, family, and other commitments

Month 1-2: Finding Your Rhythm

Most students try different formats initially. Kendra started with weekend sessions but switched to online when her work travel increased. The key is figuring out when you actually retain information best - some people are morning learners, others think clearer in the evening.

Month 3-4: First Project Crunch

This is where individual pacing really matters. Your first mobile game prototype is due, and everyone works differently. Some students bang it out in weekend marathons, others chip away during lunch breaks. We provide milestone check-ins rather than rigid deadlines.

Month 5-6: Advanced Concepts

Advanced topics like game physics and multiplayer systems. Students often form study groups here regardless of their chosen format. The evening groups tend to tackle theory, while weekend sessions focus on implementation.

Month 7-8: Portfolio Development

Final portfolio preparation with one-on-one mentoring sessions. These happen by appointment - could be early morning coffee chats or late evening video calls. We work around your schedule for this crucial phase.

Personalized Learning Support

Learning Style Assessment

We figure out early whether you learn better through visual examples, hands-on coding, or discussing concepts with peers. Then we recommend the best combination of resources and formats for your style.

Goal-Based Pathways

Want to build puzzle games? Action games? Educational apps? Your projects and assignments align with your actual interests. No generic assignments - you work on games you'd actually want to play.

Adaptive Pacing

Some concepts click immediately, others need more time. The program adjusts - if you grasp user interface design quickly, we move you ahead. If game physics needs extra attention, you get additional resources and support.

"I was worried about keeping up while working full-time, but the flexible scheduling meant I never felt behind. When I got stuck on animation, extra weekend workshop sessions helped me catch up."

Student testimonial

Marcus Chen

Software Developer

"The program adapted when I had to travel for three weeks. Online modules kept me current, and when I returned, I joined evening sessions to discuss what I'd learned independently."

Student testimonial

Riley Patterson

Marketing Coordinator

"Being able to focus on educational games from the start made everything more relevant. Instead of generic exercises, I built math games for my kids - much more motivating."

Student testimonial

Brooklyn Martinez

Elementary Teacher