鶹ý

Students

鶹ýPhenomenal:鶹ý Pace and Parsons Students Team Up for Game Jam

By
Sven Latinovic
Posted
May 5, 2025
A group of Seidenberg students talking to a group of Parsons students while sitting around a table at the "Phenomenal" game jam.

Earlier in the Spring 2025 semester, students from 鶹ý鶹ýs Seidenberg School of Computer Science and Information Systems joined forces with peers from Parsons School of Design for an unforgettable game jam experience themed around scientific phenomena. The two-day event, named 鶹ýPhenomenal,鶹ý was run by Seidenberg鶹ýs Game Development program Director Carmine Guida and Brad MacDonald from Parsons. They challenged 24 student developers and designers to create arcade-style games that explored the wonders of science鶹ýwhile also fostering meaningful cross-campus collaboration.

The game jam kicked off on Saturday at Parsons, where students from both schools met for the first time. Icebreakers and introductions laid the groundwork for interdisciplinary collaboration. Students formed small teams of three to four participants, blending talents from both institutions.

鶹ýWhile many of the students at both schools can do code and art, our students mostly focused on coding while the Parsons students focused on design,鶹ý said Carmine Guida.

Students made their own art and even music for these projects.

On Sunday, the event moved to 鶹ý鶹ýs New York City Campus. As teams dove into development, using the 鶹ýPhenomenal鶹ý theme as inspiration to bring scientific ideas to life through gameplay, the students worked to transform their ideas into creative yet functional, playable games.

鶹ýThe students really got into the developing of their games and we started to see prototypes emerge,鶹ý Guida noted. 鶹ýBy the end of the day, the students had completed games which can be seen on itch.io.鶹ý And you can give these games a try yourself at the link below!

Image
A screenshot of one of the games developed during the game jam. It depicts a diver swimming underwater, surrounded by colorful fish.
A screenshot of one of the games developed during the game jam. 

In line with the jam鶹ýs arcade-style directive, all projects were designed to be playable on a custom arcade machine located in the Design Factory space on the ninth floor of 15 Beekman. Some of the completed games are already featured on the machine鶹ýand can be played by anyone who wants to try them out!

What made 鶹ýPhenomenal鶹ý particularly special was not just the quality of the work produced, but the spirit of collaboration it cultivated. According to Dr. Guida, the event surpassed all expectations. 鶹ýThis event was even better than expected!鶹ý he said.

Everyone worked so well together. They were great at dividing up the work and everyone was constantly working and doing things.

Perhaps even more exciting is what鶹ýs coming next. 鶹ýThese kids are staying in touch with each other and want to do more collaborations,鶹ý Guida added.

Events like 鶹ýPhenomenal鶹ý show how powerful experiential learning can be when paired with curiosity, creativity, and community. By stepping out of their comfort zones and collaborating across disciplines, students didn鶹ýt just build games鶹ýthey built lasting connections and new ways of thinking. And for many of them, this jam was just the beginning.

More from Pace

In the Media

Seidenberg students Nyosha Homicil and Eric Kouperman represented Pace at an AI hackathon hosted by Horizon Media and Google, where their team 鶹ý Synth Solutions 鶹ý won the $10,000 grand prize, Associated Press reports.

In the Media

Seidenberg Interim Dean Li-Chiou Chen is named one of City & State New York鶹ýs 鶹ýAsian Trailblazers鶹ý for her visionary leadership in technology and higher education.