🏆🎊 YOU FINISHED THE WHOLE COURSE! 🎊🏆
Six projects, hours of code, a real Snake game, and now
something all your own. From print('Hello') to here —
you did every line.
🧠 What you learned
In six projects, you met:
print, variables, f-strings — the basicsinput— asking the player questionsif/elif/else— making choicesforloops withrange— doing things N timesturtle— drawing on screen with shapes and colors- Functions with
defand parameters — naming chunks of code random.randint— picking random numbers- Lists — holding many things in one box
- Modules —
import turtle,import random,from datetime import datetime screen.ontimer— the game loopscreen.onkey— keyboard control- Collision math — distance + comparisons +
in
That’s a real chunk of Python. Real, useful, write-actual-games Python. 🔥
🚀 What next?
You don’t need this site anymore. You know enough to make things on your own. A few ideas:
- Build a bigger game. Pong. Brick breaker. Tic-tac-toe. Top-down racing.
- Try a new tool. Install Python on your computer (your parent can help) and try pygame for bigger games with sound.
- Try the More Python path at Raspberry Pi Foundation — next level of skills, free.
- Show someone what you made. Make a screen recording. Email it to a grandparent. Submit it to your school.
- Help someone else learn. Teaching is the best way to lock things in.
🙏 Credits
Projects 1–4 are adapted from the Raspberry Pi Foundation’s “Introduction to Python” pathway under CC BY-SA 4.0. Thank you, RPF! 💙
Project 5 (Snake!) and Project 6 (Invent Your Own) are this site’s additions, in the same style.