Building Game Developers Since 2018

We started in a small shared workspace with three people who loved making games. That's still what drives us today.

Back then, we noticed something. There were plenty of coding bootcamps around, but very few places teaching mobile game development the right way. Most programs skipped the creative side entirely or focused only on theory without actual production work. We wanted to change that.

How We Actually Got Here

Our founder, Miroslav, spent years working at mobile studios in Sofia before moving to Ruse. He saw talented people struggle because they learned either programming or design, but rarely both together. Games need that intersection.

So we built our first course around real production pipelines. Students worked on actual game projects from day one. Some of those early projects still exist in app stores today. That hands-on approach became our foundation.

By 2020, we moved into our current space on Mutkurova Street. We brought in instructors who'd shipped commercial titles. The goal was simple: teach people to make games the way studios actually make them, not just academic exercises.

Students working collaboratively on game development projects in our training facility

What Makes Our Programs Different

We focus on three things that matter most when you're learning to build games for mobile platforms. It's not revolutionary. It just works.

Instructor demonstrating Unity mobile optimization techniques during a live session

Real Production Tools

You'll use Unity and actual mobile SDKs from the start. We teach optimization for phones that people actually own, not just high-end devices. Performance matters in mobile games, so we cover it thoroughly.

Student presenting game prototype to peers during portfolio review session

Portfolio Projects

Every student builds at least two complete games during our six-month program. These aren't demos. They're polished projects you can show employers or publish yourself. Several have made it to app stores already.

Group of students testing mobile game builds on various devices in the lab

Industry Mentorship

Our instructors still work in game development. They bring current knowledge about what studios need right now. You'll get feedback from people who understand the market and what makes games successful on mobile platforms.

Lead instructor demonstrating advanced game mechanics to students during workshop

Meet Our Teaching Team

We have five full-time instructors and three part-time mentors who join for specialized modules. Everyone brings actual studio experience. Some worked at larger companies in Sofia and Plovdiv. Others built successful indie games independently.

The teaching approach is direct. We don't believe in gatekeeping knowledge or making game development seem more complicated than it needs to be. If you put in the work, you'll learn what you need.

All our instructors maintain active projects outside of teaching. This keeps their knowledge current and ensures they understand the challenges students will face when entering the field. We think that matters more than fancy credentials.

Our next comprehensive program starts in September 2025. Applications open in June. We typically accept twenty students per cohort because we want to maintain proper instructor-to-student ratios. Smaller groups mean better feedback on your work.

What We Actually Believe In

Workspace showing development environment and mobile testing devices used in daily coursework

No Shortcuts

Game development takes time to learn properly. We don't promise you'll become an expert in weeks. Our programs run six months because that's how long it takes to build real skills and complete meaningful projects.

Practical Over Theoretical

Theory matters, but making games teaches you faster than reading about making games. Most class time involves building, testing, and iterating on actual game projects. You'll learn concepts through application.

Honest Feedback

We'll tell you when something needs improvement. The game industry can be demanding, and sugar-coating criticism doesn't prepare students for real work environments. Our feedback is constructive but direct.

Want to Learn Game Development?

Our next enrollment period opens June 2025 for programs starting that September. If you're interested in learning mobile game development with instructors who actually build games, reach out. We're happy to answer questions about the curriculum.

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