Students can measure oxygen production, track chloroplast movement, and graph the impact of light deprivation. With a portable garden, they can move plants into darkness for 24 hours to test starch levels using iodine—an experiment impossible with fixed outdoor beds.

The educational impact of such a system extends beyond biology. Gardening in the classroom serves as a multidisciplinary tool that touches upon mathematics, through measuring growth rates and calculating yields, and social studies, by exploring where food comes from and the importance of sustainable practices. By using the Classroom 6x system, teachers can create a living laboratory that makes abstract concepts tangible.

Unlike frantic arcade games, this one rewards patience. Every click matters. Every decision to water vs. wait impacts your final score.

Close other tabs. This game is light, but 15 open Google Docs will choke any Chromebook.