Lucas Learning
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Lucas Learning is an initiative of the George Lucas Educational Foundation with a mission to work with partners to combine research-validated project-based learning principles with modern simulation technology for pre-K-12 schools.
History
In its initial iteration, started in 1996, the Lucas Learning company was founded by George Lucas as a spin-off to LucasArts in order to provide challenging, engaging and fun educational software for classrooms. Many of their award-winning titles were based on the national curriculum. The company was located in San Rafael, California, and was headed by former MECC senior vice president of development and creative director Susan Schilling. Shilling asserted that Lucas was personally involved with the products and that a company mantra was to stay away from violence. They released games from 1998 until announcing their cancellation of a Mac version of Star Wars Super Bombad Racing in mid 2001, the year Lucas Learning decided to leave the market.
Games
| Title | Platform | Release date |
|---|---|---|
| Star Wars: DroidWorks | PC/MAC | October 21, 1998 |
| Star Wars Episode I: The Gungan Frontier | PC/MAC | May 24, 1999 |
| Star Wars: Yoda's Challenge Activity Center | PC/MAC | August 17, 1999 |
| Star Wars: Pit Droids | PC/MAC | September 18, 1999 |
| Star Wars: Anakin's Speedway | PC/MAC | March 20, 2000 |
| Star Wars: Early Learning Activity Center | PC/MAC | August 15, 2000 |
| Star Wars Math: Jabba's Game Galaxy | PC/MAC | September 1, 2000 |
| Star Wars: Jar Jar's Journey | PC/MAC | November 15, 2000 |
| Star Wars: Super Bombad Racing (published by LucasArts) | PS2 | April 23, 2001 |
Critical reception
The Boston Herald wrote that the company was "setting a new standard in software development with a unique cooperative effort between Lucas' film and software sides".
External links
- , The Journal