 Well, today we're looking at some projects I've been working on. I've got a lot of projects up on GitHub. If you go to github.com forward slash metal x1000 is where I post all my code. If you go there and click on repositories, you can see all my different projects that I have up. And this week we're looking at some simple 2D games I've created for my daughter. Who is to? Most of them are educational and fun. Some are just fun. They are using Phaser 2D, which is a great library for creating HTML5 games. They all use, or most of them use a template I've created called Phaser Game Template, which I reviewed last week or went over last week. That source code is there if you're going to create your own games. And the games we're going to be looking at, there's the Little Bo Peep one. There's the Open Piano one. There is the Toy Record player. And there is the Elephant one, the Pink Elephant. And then there's the Apple Tree, which is actually one of the first games I created. It does not use the template that I created, but it's still using Phaser 2D. And the code on that one is really, really sloppy. But it's functional and actually has more features than most of the other games. I spent a lot of time on it learning new things. Now you can find all the source code. Again, here at GitHub. But if you want to try the games out, and if you have a modern browser, and I mainly have tested these in Chrome on both my Linux desktop and on my Android device, I know that there's the little bit I've been able to try it out on Android, Safari, seems to have some issues with some of the games. If anyone has an iPhone device with Safari, and would like me help fix this code, I would encourage me to troubleshoot stuff when I don't have the device in front of me. And I have not tried Chrome on iPhone or iPad to see how it works, but I'm assuming it will work well. But on your desktop, or your tablet, or your phone, you can go to filmsbychrist.com, forward slash games, forward slash kids. I don't have a nice menu or page set up yet, and hopefully there will be more games here later on. But all these games are live and ready to go. And again, once you load them up, they are in offline mode, so you can disconnect from the internet, and they will still load up. The first one we'll look at is the Little Bo Peep one. Click on that. It has a quick little load screen. And if you click on the page, you can see that there's... You can't click on the sheep here, but there's two game modes. There is Play the Main Game, and then there's Sheep Pile. I'll click on Play the Main Game. Then the game goes full screen then. And you can hear me saying a little nursery rhyme with a high-pitched voice. And again, these are simple, created for a two-year-old, so they're very simple. Basically, if you click on the right side of the screen, Little Bo Peep will move to the right. The more you click, she'll go a little bit faster. If you click the other way, she'll go the other way, and she'll eventually slow down and come to a stop if you stop clicking. But the point of the game is to just chase the sheep around, and when you get to them, they jump and run away. So you can try to catch the sheep. And just like in the nursery rhyme with Little Bo Peep, they'll... If you chase them, they'll run away. That's the point of this. If we click Exit, little game credit there. If we click Sheep Pile, this one, again, a little rhyme this time that I made up. But you can move mouse cursor over the sheep, and it's... The point of the game is to tickle the sheep. So like on a tablet, you would use your finger, and you would chase these sheep around. And every so often, when one reaches one side of the screen, another sheep will come in. They all have various speeds, and that's that game. And if we go back now, we can also see Open Piano, which is a very simple piano, which is really designed for a touchscreen the way I designed it, because it's not clicking it to whatever the mouse is over, so it's hard to play a song with the mouse. So on a tablet, it works nicely. Pink Elephants is a game to work on colors. If you click... The point of the game is to click on the elephants, which pops bigger elephants into smaller elephants. And when you click on a smaller elephant, they disappear. And if you ever miss, it creates a new elephant and tells you the color. This is another one that does not work on iPhones, on Safari properly, that I've checked, because I'm using one image and using code to adjust the colors, and apparently that does not work. So all the elephants are the pink color, regardless of what it says. Other than that, I think the game works. I think mainly the issues I have on iPhone, iPad devices with Safari is full screen mode is not working quite right. Again, Apple Tree. This one's meant to go in vertical mode on a tablet. So you'll have black sides here, but you can add apples up to 10, and then they fall. So you have some physics with gravity there. If you click the owl, he says, whew. You can add five yellow stars, and then they bounce like the apples do, although they don't make a noise. You have a blue bird if you click over here, a green parrot on that side, and flowers, different colors on each side of the tree. And when you get to 10, after a few seconds, they all wither away. So the point of this game is just to teach kids how to click the screen and also teach them numbers and colors. And the last one is the toy record player, which on a tablet or phone sometimes can take a little bit of time for the music to load, even though it's preloaded to the device. It takes a little while because they're longer sound files. So if you click on one and it takes five seconds for the sound to load, once it loads to the RAM, it tends to load no problem, but you can see you can click on these records and it plays the song, says the name of the song with a nice little rotating animation there. And you just have your normal kids songs here. And there's always an info where you can learn about the program and a main menu button. So I just wanted to bring those to your attention in case you have kids that are free and open source games I've created. And I hope that you enjoy them. Again, the source code is at github.github.com, github.com, github.com, github.com, github.com, github.com, github.com, github.com, github.com, github.com, github.com, github.com, github.com, github.com. And if you want to try the games out, filmsbychrist.com, forward slash games, forward slash kids, hopefully in the future I'll actually have a page here that looks a little bit nicer than just a default index for a page. But again, all these games, once you load them in Chrome, you can easily add them to your desktop if you click your menu button, click add to home screen, you'll add them with a nice icon based on their favicon, and they'll be in offline mode, so if you're traveling and you have a tablet that doesn't have internet access, once you've loaded them, they're basically installed and you're good to go. As always, I thank you for watching. If you enjoyed these videos, be sure to like, share, and subscribe. If you enjoy the games, be sure to share them, I appreciate that. If you have any suggestions on the code, I would love to hear them, or at least see them I should say. If you're going to make some changes, let me know, I'll be glad to add them if they improve the game. And of course you can fork it on GitHub if you wanted to. And as always, I hope that you have a great day.