Potato Pirates - Learn programming in 30 minutes through a Potato card game
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Potato Pirates is a strategic tabletop card game perfect for classrooms, family time, and game night with friends. It teaches anyone ages 6 and up, over 10 hours worth of programming concepts in 30 minutes, all without a computer.

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It is a very fun game and requires quite a bit of thinking as well so play. But once you get started, it is very fun. Your way of thinking in terms of programming paradigm will evolve as you play more games. But in its core it is a legit fun card game that is sure to entertain anyone (more people more fun)!
Pros:Very fun and interesting way to learn programming. Not to mention, its very much engaging.
Cons:Can take a bit of thinking to get started, but once you do, its awesome.
I love this game. I've played it with a few different groups and everyone has had a really good time and got really into it.
Pros:A round is quite quick (after the first time), easy for everyone to learn and the tactics and play book is really well thought through
Cons:First round takes awhile while everyone figures out the rules
For newbies, it might take a little time to get used to the game play, but weell worth it.
Pros:Giggly Fun from the get go! Learning without knowing you are coding!
Cons:Play a round to get to know the rules, they can take some getting used to!
I backed this on kickstarter because the idea seemed both genius and adorable. I was not disappointed! I'd love to see an expansion in the future. I also loved that there was crowd-translating into many languages! Proud to have contributed to the Hebrew translation :)
Pros:Quick, relatively easy to understand, opens your mind to different thinking patterns.
Cons:The potatoes are too cute! If playing too slowly, game can feel a but boring.
I'm a computer science teacher at K-12 school and was extremely excited to get a game that used physical components away from a computer to teach programming concepts. I think it can help students focus on the concepts away from the distractions of the internet.
The major challenge with this game is the competition aspect. This makes it so that only a specific group of kids will be engaged enough to tease out the lessons the game is trying to impart. It is very easy to lose, particularly when you're first starting to learn (i.e., the first 30 minutes), and a lot of kids don't handle losing well.
I've had teenage girls who when they started to lose instantly checked out and younger boys who when they started to lose just started sabotaging the game and annoying their friends.
I've also had groups of students who were awesome about it, appropriately silly, and dove into deep strategies (including forming "alliances" with other players) to win the game.
Player elimination, in general, is not a good idea in an educational game IMO and I've found competition games to be tough in a variety of educational settings.
I'm not an "everyone gets a trophy" type of educator but since this game is designed for younger students, I think something that uses collaboration and/or has students competing against themselves would serve a larger group of students.
Just be advised that this game is not optimal for all settings.
Pros:Engaging
Fun
Gets kids thinking algorithmically
Cons:Easy to lose early
Only for a specific group of kids
Competition not as good as collaboration
Enter The Spudnet Board Game
I've played this game with my kids and with my students. The silliness of potato pirates roasting other potato pirates masks the serious logical learning that happens in the game. Hail Potato King!
Pros:Fun family game play, educational, silly, POTATOES!
Cons:It takes several rounds to learn the basics.
Rolljak