videos
products
interactive
Videos are how we started, and interactive products are what we’re exploring going forward.
While the idea to bring our birds and storytelling to the world of gaming has been around for a long time, the more we researched, the more we understood that - well, it’s complicated. But we believe that it’s worth going through the trouble.
Interactive media, and video games specifically, offer us the opportunity to not only explain the universe we live in but give players the chance to dive head first into worlds of our own creation.
And nothing - from an atom to the largest black hole in outer space - is boring if you make it fun to experience and explore.
Our portfolio
Star Birds
Star Birds is a cheerful asteroid base-building and resource management game. Discover and mine countless asteroids, create production networks and guide your colony of spacefaring birds to new interstellar horizons!
Star Birds is set to launch into space (and into your Steam library) in 12,025.
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Out of Scale: A Kurzgesagt Adventure
Journey through 5 levels of scale ranging from molecular to mountain to clean up the aftermath of a lab test gone slightly wrong (emphasis on slightly!). Scanning and scaling your way through the environment, you’ll learn about the different rules that apply to each realm, and have to deal with giant ants, fungi & tardigrades taking over the city. On your adventure, you’ll be joined by STEVE, the lab’s AI assistant, and will be the first to try out his newest invention, Shrink-o-gen.
Universe in a Nutshell
The range of size in the universe, from the tiniest particles to the epic galaxies - we take you on a journey of size that lets you explore it all with a single swipe. How big is a planet, compared to a human? And how small is an atom really? You can’t fully wrap your head around the scope of things by just reading about them – so this app lets you experience them in comparison to get a feeling for their true scale. By simply swiping you can zoom in and out all the way from the world of fundamental particles up to the largest stars at the edge of the observable universe.