Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Gaming
  3. Legacy Archives

Free Games Get Kids Into Nanotech

Add as a preferred source on Google
Free Games Get Kids Into Nanotech
Image used with permission by copyright holder

If the computer games kids play are responsible for shaping their career choices, we may be in trouble, since that probably means that in 20 years we’re going to be a nation of race car drivers, space marines and criminals. Oh, and possibly nanotech researchers. The Oregon nanotech company FEI has launched a set of series of free NanoMission games that aim to get Junior into science and technology through gaming.

London-based Playgen developed three games for the series. The first game, NanoScaling, introduces children to the concept of scale, and helps them wrap their minds around the difference in size between something like the sun and something like a hydrogen atom. The second game, NanoImaging, sends players on a mission to destroy harmful microorganisms in lakes and streams using a scanning electron microscope. Third, NanoMedicine challenges players to destroy cancer cells in the human body without damaging healthy tissue.

Recommended Videos

As the oft-cited statistics go, interest in careers in science and technology among schoolchildren has been waning in the United States and Western Europe lately. Many experts are concerned about what this bodes for the future. “The falling numbers of science and engineering students in western Europe and the United States will have a real economic impact in an increasingly technology dependent society,” said Tim Harper, director of the nanotech association Cientifica and project advisor to the game series. “It is vitally important that the technology community supports projects such as NanoMission to ensure that our economies remain competitive in the 21st century.”

All three games are currently available to download for free from FEI’s Web site.

Nick Mokey
As Digital Trends’ Editor in Chief, Nick Mokey oversees an editorial team covering every gadget under the sun, along with…
Trying to cancel PS Plus? Sony might just make you an offer
Reports suggest some subscribers are receiving discounts of up to 50% before they leave.
Playstation Plus logo on sales

Ever tried cancelling a subscription only to be greeted with a "Wait! Here's a discount!" message? It looks like PlayStation has started borrowing that playbook. A growing number of users report being offered discounts of up to 50% on PlayStation Plus when attempting to cancel their memberships, making it one of the biggest retention offers Sony has rolled out in recent years.

Not everyone gets the same deal

Read more
Xbox’s Netflix strategy has reportedly failed. Now it’s betting on hardware again
After years of chasing the Netflix model, Microsoft's gaming strategy may be returning to hardware and first-party exclusives.
An Xbox controller being held up in front of an Xbox Series S

For much of the past decade, Xbox had one big idea: be the Netflix of gaming. Under Phil Spencer, Microsoft invested tens of billions of dollars into Game Pass, bought some of the industry's biggest publishers, and pushed the idea that subscriptions, not consoles, would define gaming's future. According to a new report from Bloomberg, that vision is now being rethought.

A new direction for Xbox

Read more
Xbox reportedly wanted 77 million Game Pass subscribers. It has just 30 million
Microsoft's biggest gaming bet fell far short of its original target, despite years of acquisitions and heavy investment.
Xbox Game Pass custom featured

Microsoft spent years positioning Xbox Game Pass as the future of gaming. But according to a new report from Bloomberg, the service has fallen well short of the ambitious goals Xbox originally set for it. The report claims Xbox executives targeted 77 million Game Pass subscribers by the end of fiscal 2026. Instead, the service reportedly sits at around 30 million subscribers today, which is less than half of what Microsoft had hoped to achieve.

Game Pass reportedly peaked earlier than expected

Read more