TODAY: A little green dot? It’s on the cards

cards

TODAY reports that a student of Nanyang Polytechnic has served up a new card game named GREENERDot to educate S’poreans about local flora, and to raise awareness about environmental issues.

A little green dot? It’s on the cards

SINGAPORE – If you cannot tell one tree from another, a new “environmental bonding” card game, GREENERDot, could help kickstart your education on Singapore’s diverse flora.

GREENERDot is “a game to educate all Singaporeans about environmental issues in Singapore”, according to its designer, Nanyang Polytechnic student Pang Yu Han.

The 18-year-old came up with the game after signing up for the Bayer Young Environmental Programme 2012, a programme for tertiary students that aims to help ease environmental issues in Singapore.

“I thought this would be a good chance for me to really help the earth,” she said. “I wanted a game – I think games help people learn better.”

The name GREENERDot is a play on words, explained Yu Han: “By being a green nerd, you can make our little red dot, Singapore, a greener dot.”

The game features a deck of 50 cards and gameplay involves collecting sets of “Green Spaces” and growing plants on them. The Green Spaces feature popular parks in Singapore, such as the recently launched Gardens By The Bay, and each contains a description of the park’s history.

Trees are grown using “Sapling”, “Compost” and “Adult Tree” cards, each with a description for players to learn more about growing a plant. Some of Singapore’s common trees are also featured with descriptions.

The game also has “Impact Cards” that can affect the growing process, with positives such as “Reforestation” and negatives such as “Pollution”. Players can defeat the negatives by playing a “Change Agent” card.

“The real Change Agents are humans. If we do our part, we can get rid of negative impacts on the environment and save the earth,” she said.

Yu Han designed all the cards herself, which took a whole week with barely any sleep. Before she designed the game, Yu Han was “not very concerned about the environment”. But since starting on the game, she has become an active member of the Nanyang Polytechnic Geo Council, a CCA that helps equip students with environmental knowledge.

While she said that the current environmental situation in Singapore is “quite healthy”, she feels that awareness has to be raised to prevent things from deteriorating. For Yu Han, GREENERDot is just the first step towards a green future. “My long-term aim is to do something different from others and to help the world,” she said.

Image from Nomad Crafts Supplies

About these ads

Leave a Reply

Fill in your details below or click an icon to log in:

WordPress.com Logo

You are commenting using your WordPress.com account. Log Out / Change )

Twitter picture

You are commenting using your Twitter account. Log Out / Change )

Facebook photo

You are commenting using your Facebook account. Log Out / Change )

Connecting to %s

  • About Green Drinks Singapore

    Founded in November 2007, Green Drinks Singapore is one of more than 800 cities with a Green Drinks presence.

  • We are a non-profit environmental movement that connects academia, green businesses, activists, community and government, for knowledge sharing and collaboration opportunities. We do this by organising informal talks every last Thursday of the month, over drinks! Once in a while, we hold discussions, documentary screenings and workshops to further engage the public and participants.
  • Started in 1989 in London, the Green Drinks movement is a self-organising network that is meant to be simple and unstructured. The global site can be found at www.greendrinks.org.
%d bloggers like this: