
Learn the basics of Scratch in 8 Minutes, and create a cool little game while you're at it!
You'll be creating my game Airplane in Scratch, from Scratch.
In this last episode of the Airplane Shooter series, we will be adding art, enemy health, and enemy waves.
If you don't know where to get the assets, look at the first Assignment, RESOURCES, to get the download link.
Get a basic understand of what a variable is in Scratch.
Today we will be creating Flappy Bird in just 5 minutes. This should give you a pretty basic understand on how scratch works.
This might be a little difficult, but it'll give you something to work with when you want to make players or enemies display their health on the screen without a number.
In this lecture, we'll start making our Geometry Dash clone by first importing the player, background, and spikes, and then coding the background to scroll.
In this video, we'll make the player jump when you press the space bar, with a gravity/jump variable to make it more realistic. We'll also add enemies.
In Episode 3, We'll be starting from Scratch to make our Geometry Dash clone more complicated, by adding a scrolling background with clones, creating actual blocks to jump over and making it overall better. You can save your previous Geometry Dash project as a clone, because in this Episode we will be starting over again.
In this video we'll be adding the Death effect,
FINALLY we are adding the player jump, so we will be able to not die when we go over spikes.
In this last episode of the Geometry Dash series, we are adding a new sprite for the enemies.
Welcome to the Subway Surfers series! In Episode 1, we will be creating the trucks, their hitboxes, making the trucks move, and the player jump.
In Episode 2, we'll be creating a scrolling background, and making the trucks randomized.
In the last episode of the Subway Surfer series, I'm going to show you how to create powerups, such as coins, and the super jump boots.
Welcome to the Minecraft Series! In the first episode, I'll take you through terrain generation in Scratch. By the end of it, we should have a screen that is fully covered in a 2D Minecraft level.
In Episode 2, we will code in a way to destroy and add blocks to the world.
In this Episode, we will code a placing system.
In this final Minecraft episode, you'll either draw or import your Player model, and we'll code it to move around.
In this episode, we'll draw the player and code the movement.
In Episode 2, I'll show you how to add enemies, make them spawn, and then add health to them.
In this episode,we'll be coding in a health bar for the player.
In Episode 4, we'll create powerups for the player. Remember where the Resources are! The first assignment of this course.
In Episode 5, we'll be making waves for the enemies. Now, you can customize how much enemies appear on each level, how much health they have and more!
Today we'll be creating Sound Effects and VFX for the game, like Muzzle Flashes, death effects, and gun shooting effects.
Download the resources with the first assignment!
In this last episode, I couldn't figure out anything else to add, so today we'll be making a Menu screen.
In this first episode, we'll be using clones to fill up the screen with different backgrounds that scroll.
Today you'll be creating borders for the game, and add an NPC that you can talk too.
Don't want that ugly default profile picture, but want to create your own? In this video, we'll be making a Profile Picture/Logo for your Scratch Account, in Scratch.
Online highscores let people compete with each other and make them want to play your game more. Who doesn't want to get the highscore in a game just to brag about it?
Tired of the default orange variable look? Spice up your game by adding a custom number display to it. You can even choose your own fonts and colors to make your game look polished.
These are some useful but rare hacks that you can put in your game today!
How to make Screen Shake
Learn to Code by Making 10 Real Games in Scratch 3.0!
Whether you're a parent, teacher, or curious beginner — this course will teach you programming the fun way: by building playable games inspired by Minecraft, Flappy Bird, Subway Surfers, and more!
This hands-on, beginner-friendly course introduces kids and adults alike to Scratch 3.0, a visual coding platform trusted by millions.
What You'll Build:
A Minecraft-style crafting game
A Subway Surfers-style runner
A Flappy Bird clone
A Geometry Dash platformer
...and more!
What You’ll Learn:
Drag-and-drop coding with Scratch’s visual interface
Programming basics: loops, variables, logic, events
How to animate characters and add sound effects
Game dev essentials: scoring, levels, player control
How to share your games online with the Scratch community
Extras Included:
Interactive video tutorials
Creative challenges after every game
Bonus: Certificate of Completion
Access to our private Scratch coder forum
No prior experience needed. Just bring curiosity — we’ll bring the code!
By the end of this course, you'll have built a portfolio of impressive games, gained confidence in your coding skills, and unlocked a creative outlet that can grow with you. Start your journey in game development today — the world of Scratch is waiting!
Here there and mare.