Tuesday, July 7, 2026

Playing with Purpose: My 2-Year Journey with Games for Change

What happens when you hand a young person a game engine and ask them to solve a global crisis? You don't just get clever mechanics or high scores; you get empathy in action. You get an entirely new perspective on the world's most pressing challenges, built one line of code at a time.

For the past two consecutive years, I’ve had the distinct honor of serving as a juror for the Games for Change (G4C) Student Challenge. In my everyday work with Gibson EdTech Advising, I constantly engage with how gaming is a phenomenal catalyst for learning and career pathways. But sitting in the juror’s seat for G4C takes that belief to an entirely new level, showing exactly what happens when creative design thinking meets real-world global impact.

A cartoon image of Gibson playing video games and testing the G4C Student Challenge submissions.
Gibson Play Testing


On May 28th, 2026, our global community celebrated the culmination of this incredible hard work at the 11th Annual G4C Student Challenge Awards Ceremony, hosted live on Twitch by Anjali Bhimani. Watching the community tune in to honor youth ages 10–25 was an unforgettable reminder of why contributing to this space is so vital.

The Power of Theme-Driven Design

This year, student participants from all around the world were challenged to collaborate and build completely original games centered on three critical global impact themes:

Graphic showing the three themes from the G4C Student Challenge, Own the Road, Outgrow Hunger, and All in for Nature.
G4C Themes
  • 🚗 Own the Road (Supported by General Motors)

  • 🌾 Outgrow Hunger (Powered by World Food Program USA)

  • 🐠 All in for Nature: Reefs & Rainforests (Supported by Playing for the Planet)

As a judge who looks at education through the lens of critical thinking and computer science, evaluating these submissions is both exciting and refreshing. Students aren't just trying to make something "fun"; they are tasked with unpacking complex global issues like supply chains, environmental degradation, and societal structures.

When a young developer builds a game mechanic that visually demonstrates how regional food systems fail, or how fragile marine ecosystems collapse under pollution, that is authentic, project-based learning at its finest. It is proof that computer science isn't just about where the semicolons go; it is a powerful toolkit for contributing to the world.

Why This Work Matters to Me

As an educator connected to scholastic esports, math, computer science, and game design, I live for the moments where instruction turns into exploration. Evaluating these games for two years running has solidified a few core beliefs:

1. Games Build Deep Empathy: It's one thing to read a textbook paragraph about climate change; it's another entirely to play through a simulation where your choices directly impact a digital rainforest. Games force players to step into someone else's shoes.

2. Youth Creativity is Limitless: The cleverness behind the character designs, UI layouts, and narrative arcs created by these young developers is staggering. They tackle massive, heavy problems with fresh, unbothered optimism.

3. It Takes a Village: A student doesn't become a game designer in a vacuum. It takes dedicated educators, parents, and industry mentors providing the space, tools, and encouragement to let them build.

Experience the Future of Gaming!

A massive congratulations to all the winners across the 10 award categories, and an equally huge thank you to every student, educator, and parent who put their heart into this competition.

If you missed the live celebration, you can catch the full recording right now on the G4C Learn YouTube channel. Even better, go play the games yourself! You can dive straight into the creativity of these young minds by visiting the Student Challenge Arcade. Trust me, you will walk away incredibly inspired by what the next generation is capable of creating.

Join the Conversation! 🚀

Have you ever played a game that completely changed your perspective on a real-world issue? Let me know your thoughts in the comments below, and don't forget to subscribe for more updates on the intersection of edtech, gaming, and playful learning! 


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