Pok Pok Playroom Is a Goal-Free Kids’s App from ‘Alto’s Odyssey’ Creators
ECO-WORTHY 10W Solar Car Battery Charger Maintainer 12V Waterproof Portable Solar Trickle Charger for Car Truck Boat Lawn Mower RV Trailer Tractor ATV Utility Vehicle Battery
$31.99 (as of 22:17 GMT +00:00 - More info)BELTTT 2000W Pure Sine Wave Inverter, Car Power Inverter 12V to 120V AC Converter for RV, Truck, Solar, Outdoor with Dual AC and 20A Socket, 5V 2.1A USB, Surge 4000W, Hardwire Port, Remote Controller
$164.99 (as of 22:17 GMT +00:00 - More info)Pok Pok
From the creators of Altos Odyssey and Altos Adventure, Pok Playroom is a new subscription-based app that motivates kids to explore their imagination without the failures, goals, and achievements come across in a lot of kids video games. Coming to iPhone and iPad on May 20th, Pok Playroom costs $4 a month or $30 a year.
Pok Pok Playroom disregards (or outright avoids) much of the tropes found in kids games. You will not come across amazing sound results, flashy animations, condescending tutorials, or talking animals in Pok Playroom, and the open-ended app doesnt set objectives or force kids into repeated benefit loops. Instead, Pok Playroom is like a virtual box of old-fashioned toys, providing kids the freedom to picture their own stories and explore their imagination.
Enthusiastic in scope, Pok Playground started its life as a side job by Esther Huybreghts and Mathijs Demaeght of Snowman, the studio responsible for Altos Adventure. The group started work on Pok after recognizing that kids apps lacked the freedom of structure blocks and other real-world toys. Now the task is coming to life, and its creators supervise of Pok studios, a spin-off of Snowman.
The majority of the games in Pok Playground are directly inspired by traditional kids toys. There are building blocks, a digital paintbrush, and a virtual table covered in enjoyable buttons.
Pok Pok has no in-app purchases and expenses $4 a month or $30 a year (after a 14-day trial). The app will get continuous updates after it launches May 20th, though it will stay relatively small to keep kids from getting overwhelmed. Currently, Pok hasnt revealed plans to release its app on Fire tablets or Android phones.
Source: Pok by means of 9to5Mac
Related Content
- In-depth Q&A: What is the UK’s ‘net-zero’ plan for transport?
- Q&A: Will England’s National Food Strategy help tackle climate change?
- Solar Power at NIGHT – Simple Hack!
- Renewable Power Perspectives Q&A with Kristal Hansley, Founder & CEO of WeSolar, Inc.
- Apple Exec: We Feature Competitors’ Apps ‘All The Time’ on the App Store