 Welcome to the final unit of the, until now, final chapter of the future of storytelling. And you know what? Even if this MOOC is not a fictional transmedia storytelling project, the same components and models of a multi-platform format apply. There are video lectures, maybe you have noticed, that are meant to stand for themselves. Video material, for example videos on YouTube, like the Sign Him Up video from chapter 1, or the Oculus Rift alone demo, that can be watched for themselves, without even knowing that something like a story MOOC exists. There are texts or questions, discussions here and there on the web, really a whole lot of discussions, which I really like, blog entries and so many, so unexpectedly great, personal, inspiring and touching creative task results, all of those parts might be thoroughly able to stand alone for themselves. Yet, the experience of reading, watching or listening to them, all, is greatly enriched by its sum, when enjoying all of it together, being able to draw links between the single pieces and taking in the whole sphere. Have we as a team had an idea, a plan of how this project was meant to work out? Yes, of course, but as Patrick Möller described in regard to alternate reality games, mapping out and following the path is far from what this project has been and still is, Apart from our pre-designed route that we have sketched out for you, by launching the lectures here and trying to pose the right questions, it's the community, you, that have shaped this MOOC and made it what it is. How? By co-authoring it and telling its story in such an amazing and collaborative way, solving problems together, answering each other's questions and inspiring each other. And me and my team, trying to react in real time to what goes on in the story MOOC universe, outside this video frame, like a puppet master would do in an ARG. To me, this is what makes this story MOOC the most extraordinary, multi-platform learning experience I have ever been a part of. We, as a whole team from the story MOOC, from the University of Applied Sciences in Potsdam, want to say thank you for participating and making this such a unique experience and such a great payoff for all of us. We hope that we've been able to offer you some insights in relevant storytelling topics, inspiring you and also giving you the tools to analyze, contextualize and create upcoming media formats yourself to dig deeper into the subjects you are really interested in. Without you, this MOOC would have never been possible. There is so much we'd still like to discuss and offer, but even as the lectures of our first season, so to speak, and with this unit, the connections made and ideas and discussions provoked will hopefully last much, much longer. Thank you so much for all of it. It really has been a blast. See you, bye and auf wiedersehen. Well, it's me again. Just one last thing. Of course, we have one last creative task of the week for you to offer. It's special. It's personal and it only really works if you want it to work. Creative task of the week. Leave your address in our homework tab after this unit. It will automatically be sent out to a few other Storymokers, as well as you will receive some other addresses on your own. We've been digital for nearly all these course. Let's go analogue now and send out some good old postcards. Tell your fellow Storymoker a story on the postcard. Make it the same story for all addresses or always a different one. It's up to you. And if you're lucky and everything works out the way we plan it to, somebody will do the same for you. Of course, we are curious to see if this works. So please let us know via Twitter, Facebook or whatever. But feel free to keep the story itself on the postcard to yourself as a little gift from what was in our mind a huge exhausting, but in the end very, very rewarding MOOC experience. And concerning your address, we as the Story MOOC team and I, we won't save it. We won't use it. We won't do anything with this address. It's actually just for this task. But please anyways, just participate if you feel comfortable with this. Have fun and don't forget, stories can be really beautiful. But storytelling is as much about the story as the teller, the real passionate people involved.