The heroine in Suzanne Xie’s first interactive game for kids is no damsel in distress.
] settled on a fearless, adventure-seeking purple panda with a big group of friends — both male
female — as her lead character in Pan: The Fearless Beribolt. “She’s
feisty and not a princess,” said Xie, the twentysomething founder and
the CEO of its parent company Hullabalu.
The panda protagonist, “Pan,” is an amalgam of Xie, her close
friends, and the inspirational women she’s known throughout her life.
The New Yorker could not have dreamed up Pan at a better time, given the push for more strong female characters in games.
Xie was able to convince some high-profile tech investors to support
her vision, raising a $1.8 million seed round from YC partner Garry Tan,
Reddit cofounder Alexis Ohanian, SV Angel, Rothenberg Ventures, Liberty
City Ventures, Time Inc. president Fran Hauser, and more. About half of
the funding came through angel network AngelList.
Pan: The Fearless Beribolt debuted today on iTunes for $3.99. Similarly to competitor LaunchPad Toys,
Pan’s design is a “constructionist learning framework,” meaning that
kids can learn by both doing and creating. It’s ideal for kids between
the ages of 3 to 7.
The player can decide when the plot moves forward, so kids feel like
an integral part of the game. Text appears alongside narration, which
sets the stage for early reading success. The interactive elements are
tailored to kids based on their age and reading levels. Just for fun,
Pan features a camera booth so kids can take pictures of Pan and save
them in the iPad gallery.
One thing parents will like about Pan: It has no purchases for virtual goods.
Parents have plenty of games to choose from, but Xie claims that hers
has an edge as the plot was designed for young children in mind (not
teens, like Harry Potter). In addition, she spent hours watching kids
play on tablets, detecting subtle differences in how they hold the
device. Pan’s designed to capture kids’ attention, so she expects it
will be a lifesaver on long plane and train rides.
“It’s amazing to watch kids play the game and feel as if they are really in this world,” said Xie.
In Pan’s world, boys and girls are just friends (no Disney
Princess-like pining for the perfect prince), and it’s cool to work on
logic and reasoning problems together.
Entrepreneurs like Xie are part of a growing movement in Silicon
Valley to set girls on a trajectory so they grow up with an appreciation
for science and math. In the past year, women formed toy companies such
as Maykah and Goldieblox through highly successful runs on Kickstarter to make playthings not only suitable for girls but also that encouraged a love for math and science.
Research has shown
that only about 15 percent of female first-year college students intend
to major in STEM subjects (science, technology, engineering, and math).
But there is no scientific evidence that girls are any less capable of
mastering these subjects.
But Xie doesn’t consider herself an ed-tech entrepreneur — the
mission goes beyond the classroom. “We’re not just teaching kids how to
add and subtract,” she said. “It’s educational attendance, it’s an
appreciation for story-telling and logic. Really, it’s life-learning.”
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