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Six Fun and (Not Too) Frightening Games for Halloween Night

As we gear up for Extra Life 2017, we’ve got games on the mind. With Halloween around the corner, have we got a treat for you! Being enthusiastic gamers, we know that spooky games and stories help us learn—and they’re fun to play. We scoured the internet and our portfolio to share a few games that are better than candy. From FableVision favorites to eerie apps to indie darlings, here are six handpicked games with something sweet for every age group.

Grab your plastic vampire fangs and bite into this incredible roundup of Halloween-themed games from Team FableVision.


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Lure of the LabyrinthFableVision Studios, Maryland Public Television, and MIT Education Arcade
Time for a costume party! In Lure of the Labyrinth, suggested for middle-school students, players can pick out masks and costumes to blend in with the monsters in a subterranean world. Once players infiltrate the monster factory, they solve math problems to progress through the story about the hero’s quest to rescue their pet. Lure of the Labyrinth reinforces math and literacy skills using a standards-based curriculum through a challenging and fun adventure. Play Lure of the Labyrinth on your browser.


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Toca Boo, Toca Boca
Hide-and-Creep! In Toca Boo, little Bonnie dons an adorable ghost costume to playfully scare her family in this digital toy from our friends at Toca Boca. Each room has several objects to interact with and hide under as Bonnie waits for family members to appear. Bonnie can turn off lights, flush toilets, and rock rocking horses to raise tension. Once her family is nervous, she strikes with a delightfully cute “BOO!” The simple, intuitive controls and variety of rooms, family members, and interactive objects gives pre-schoolers dozens of opportunities for creativity and imaginative haunting. Toca Boo is available on mobile platforms.


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Minecraft, Mojang
The immensely popular Minecraft is famous for the creativity, engineering, and programming skills it encourages, but it can be spooky too! In Survival Mode, a menagerie of monsters emerge to harass players, which encourages players to strategically design shelter and place light sources. Monsters include the Halloween classics: zombies, skeletons, and spiders…yikes! For players who want to build free from danger but still want to get into the Halloween spirit, there are several expansion packs that add Halloween-themed textures and worlds (pumpkins everywhere!) and even Halloween costumes for avatars. Minecraft is available on PC, Mac, mobile, and consoles.


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Gone Home, The Fullbright Company
In Gone Home, 21-year-old Katie Greenbriar returns from college to her family’s new house on a dark and stormy night, but finds no one waiting for her. A cryptic note from her sister Sam sets Katie on a path through the creaky house as she tries to solve the mystery of where her family has gone. Using an immersive first person perspective and outstanding environmental storytelling, Gone Home is an easy-to-play game that can be finished in a single evening—perfect for Halloween night! Through game-based social and emotional learning, Gone Home is a game about empathy and family that conveys LGBT themes in a way that only an immersive, interactive medium can achieve. Because Gone Home is a spooky story about young adult issues, it is recommended for older teens and adults. Gone Home is available on PC, Mac, and consoles.


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Zombies, Run!, Six to Start
This app combines interactive fiction and fitness for a unique combination that will have you running for your life after your Halloween candy binge! In a world overrun by zombies, you play a “runner” tasked with gathering supplies for your community. When you go for your real-world morning jog, you start a supply gathering mission in the game. Your progress is tracked like in conventional fitness apps, but music and actors on your “radio” fill you in on the story. Be careful not get too caught up in the drama, however, because when zombies appear, you must RUN! Zombies, Run! is available on mobile platforms.


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You Snooze, You Lose, FableVision Studios and Random House
When it’s time to curl up with a scary bedtime story, Jason Segel and Kirsten Miller’s book Nightmares! has you covered. In addition to creating a website for the game, FableVision produced the supplemental game, You Snooze, You Lose, an endless runner game, featuring the main character Charlie running up the stairs of his stepmother’s purple mansion. The goal of the game is to keep Charlie awake. If he falls asleep he’ll start having nightmares. Players collect items on the stairs to keep him awake—a fan, a glass of ice water, and an air horn—and avoid items that are sure to make him sleepy, like a pillow or cuddly teddy bear. Make sure those eyelids don’t droop too far! You Snooze, You Lose is available to play on the FableVision-created Nightmares! website.


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These six games are terrific tricks and treats for Halloween and a great addition to our Extra Life game-a-thon! With Extra Life only a few days away, Team FableVision will have enough fun to last during our 24-hour marathon of gaming on Nov. 4 for Boston Children’s Hospital and Children’s Miracle Network Hospitals.

If you’d like to help us scare up enough fundraising to beat this year’s goal, be sure to check out our Extra Life team page to donate!

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FableVision’s Digital Backpack!

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New clothes, crisp notebook pages waiting to be written in, the smell of freshly sharpened pencils. There’s nothing quite like the excitement of going back to school. The start of school promises a fresh set of opportunities to either keep on track or think about ways to do things differently.

Here at FableVision, we’re gearing up for the back-to-school season with our own list of must-have tools for new-year success. From the top techie to the new old schoolers, this list has something for everyone! What’s on your must-have list this fall?


For the Task Keepers

Unabashedly into organizing information, you need just the right digital tools
and management systems to keep you on-track from deadline to deliverable.

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Trello
Mitul Daiyan, Marketing Coordinator
Trello is a project management tool that helps me track the various projects on my plate. This is just the right app for people like me who prefer to have a digital checklist of their tasks that they can access from anywhere. I use it at FableVision for events I’m managing and for my personal life with boards for meals I’m prepping for the week! I can add due dates and team members to different cards for collaborative work. I can't cheer about Trello enough, I use it in tandem with Gmail Tasks and I’m ready to tackle every week.


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Wunderlist
Brian Grossman, Technical Director
Everything I have in my life, I owe to my task list. Without it, I wouldn’t get anything done. I have a surprisingly bad memory and as a result, I have trained myself to write everything down in a task list — everything. I am currently using an app called Wunderlist as my task list. It allows me to keep multiple lists, assign due dates, and synchronize them between my computer and phone. I find it to be just the right amount of functionality for my needs. What about spontaneity? How about doing something fun that’s not on the list? I couldn’t agree more… I guess that why I never finish everything on my list.


For the Nifty DIY-ers

There’s nothing more satisfying than using something you made with your own hands.

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DIY Pencil Case
Jordan Bach, Senior Developer
Making your own pencil case is the perfect way to counter the end-of-summer blues. Hand make a little pouch using your favorite fabrics and add a matching or non-matching zipper. Use it to carry around your pencils, colored pencils, markers, and maybe even a little notepad or an iPad Pencil. When life gets hectic, you can write or sketch it out. And you'll have a pleasing reminder of your creative side. Here are some ideas to help you get started!


For the Pro-gamers and Programmers

Gaming is serious business and you can’t wait to help others gamify their projects to get their noggins ticking!

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Game Design Toolkit
Peter Stidwill, Senior Producer
FableVision Studios and Learning Games Network (LGN) partnered to create the Game Design Tool Kit (GDTK), a free online resource designed to help teachers incorporate game design strategies in their curriculum. This comprehensive handbook is offered at no cost for educators and includes a lesson plan guide, research and design prompts, step-by-step instructions, and discussion guides.


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Scratch
Margarita Dekoli, Senior Developer
Scratch is a free programming language and online community where kids can create their own interactive stories, games, and animations. Learners are able to explore, tinker, or play with different parameters and permutations. By allowing kids to write their own code, you allow them to explore what they are building and to refine their thinking over time through experimentation and tweaks. Plus it’s really accessible and fun!


For the Top Techie

You get misty eyed thinking about your old Trapper Keeper
and you’re big on new gadgets with that old-school cool.

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iPad Pro, Apple Pencil, and Moleskine App
Leigh Hallisey, Creative Director
There are few thing in life that make me happier than new school supplies. I loved them as a child, and I’m so happy that having a kid gives me an excuse to enjoy the start of the year at least nine more times. My favorite BTS bundle this year is an iPad Pro, Apple Pencil, and Moleskine App. The Moleskine App allows me to choose from multiple styles of paper notes, sketches, and storyboarding. I use my Apple Pencil for digital notetaking and sketches. I love having all of my stuff in one place. (Not Lisa Frank folders and smencils love, but close.)


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Wacom Cintiq/Companion Portable Tablet
Keith Zulawnik, Lead Artist
One thing that has been super beneficial to my work has been using a Wacom Cintiq Companion. I've been using an Intuos for years and wanted to switch over to a Cintiq but always felt they were a bit unwieldy on the desk. Wacom released the mobile version a few years ago (the Companion) and I've been hooked ever since! You can't beat being able to work anywhere; it makes drawing digitally feel more natural, like a sketchbook. I get to work on the train, and most importantly, not be locked down to my desk all the time. The past month I actually switched over to their newest model, which has been rebranded from the Companion to the Mobile Studio Pro. It's really an amazing machine. If you’re looking for an alternative then the Apple iPad Pro with the Apple Pencil or the Microsoft Surface Pro are great options. Keep in mind that the iPad does not offer full versions of some software including Photoshop, but you can download an app called Procreate which is an excellent alternative.


For the New Old Schoolers

You favor the analog way of documenting and make no apologies for
your love of physical lists, notebooks, and shiny office supplies!

Bullet Journaling
Sarah Ditkoff, Marketing and Client Services Manager
I've always used a combination of my digital work calendar and written lists to stay organized. Bullet journaling is a customizable analog system that's gotten pretty trendy over the last couple years. I recently started using a simplified version of the logging system in a grid-style Moleskine. On the left page, I map out my week to help prioritize tasks: meetings, important deadlines, and larger announcements or deliverables. On the right, I "bucket" my tasks into categories that change depending on what I'm working on. Right now, I'm organizing on-ramping tasks for our new marketing interns and planning workflows for upcoming events this fall. Brightly colored sticky-notes let me add informal reminders for myself.

David Welsh, Marketing Intern
I like to keep organized in a notebook, so I’ve adopted some ideas from bullet journaling. I like the Moleskine Professional notebooks because each page is segmented into three areas. I keep the current day’s tasks at top, future tasks along the side, and use the body for lengthier notes and thoughts. With the start of the new semester, I need notebooks for writing, schoolwork, and my internship here at FableVision. I found a budget spiral bound notebook at Target (a medium Miquelrius Hemisphere) that is separated into four color-coded sections. I use blue for my calendar, red for FableVision, gray for school, and green for everything else. There is no substitute for dependable pen and paper.


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MUJI, Tea, and Totes
Samantha Bissonnette, Producer
Although most of my work is digital, my physical tools are just as important in keeping me organized! Like Sarah and David, I love my trusty Moleskine notebook. I also love the notebooks and stationery at MUJI — they have tons of classic lightweight notebooks and fun stamps too! In addition to my notebooks, I like to have one trusty bag that’s large enough for me to carry everything I need, but small enough that it won’t weigh me down when I ride my bike or take the T. This leather bag is the perfect fit! And although my little tea infuser shown here broke, I love loose leaf tea, so a fun tea infuser will be the best addition to my work space.

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