top of page

Games Logs
Archive


Simple TTRPGs Designed Specifically for Younger Players (Part 2)
This is the second part of a deep dive into tabletop role playing games (TTRPGs) built for or appropriate for younger kid players. If you...
Dee Cardenas
Jun 1, 202512 min read


Simple TTRPGs Designed Specifically for Younger Players (Part 1)
Tabletop role-playing games (TTRPGs) offer incredible opportunities for children to develop creativity, problem-solving skills, social collaboration, and storytelling abilities—all while having tremendous fun. But finding the right game can be challenging, especially if you are looking to introduce very young players to TTRPGs.
Dee Cardenas
May 16, 20256 min read


April 25, 2025
The best learning may happen when you don't realize you are doing it!
Dee Cardenas
Apr 26, 20255 min read


Table Talk, Spring 2025: Perseverance
The Intersection of Creativity, Comedy, Compassion and Perseverance
Dee Cardenas
Apr 11, 20254 min read


Neurodivergence and Role-Playing Games
Role-playing games (RPGs) offer far more than simple entertainment for neurodivergent children. They are powerful, transformative experiences that provide unique opportunities for social learning, emotional development, and personal expression.
Dee Cardenas
Mar 28, 20254 min read


Executive Function and the Twenty-sided Die Games:
How RPGs Naturally Support Cognitive Development by Dee Cárdenas, MAT The Backstory Neurodiversity acknowledges that both thinking and...
Dee Cardenas
Mar 14, 20254 min read


March 3, 2025: Kids and Role-Playing Games
These children are learning about relationships, the world, and their place in it. This is imaginative play, an early childhood form of role playing game (RPG), which is an interactive form of storytelling. This type of play allows children to explore many things: feeling more powerful or knowledgeable, seeing the world from other viewpoints, making choices, cooperating in play.
This collaboration requires children to listen to one another, take turns, compromise, follow di
Dee Cardenas
Mar 3, 20254 min read
bottom of page