![]() The multiplayer, in-person, card-based game lets a group steer the world from now to 2030, making the choices that determine our shared future. That’s where the 2030 SDGs Game comes in. Sometimes global goals like these can seem too big to enable a single person, organisation, or community to make a difference. It’s based on the SDGs – the 2030 Sustainable Development Goals that provide a framework for developing a fair, prosperous and environmentally sustainable world. Agreed by every UN nation in September 2015, there are 17 goals and 169 specific targets to be achieved by the year 2030. The origin of analog games goes way, way back to the the 9th century China.īig in Japan, today one card game is taking over events in corporate, governmental, educational and community settings – to bridge the game world and the real one in a socially conscious way. That’s because card games existed way before the digital age of smartphones and gaming. ![]() Word has it that Winston Churchill enjoyed playing card games like Gin Rummy and Mah Jong with his family before dinner and many of the world’s presidents played poker with their advisors. ![]() project_description Big in Japan: the global goals can seem too big to make a difference. That’s where the 2030 SDGs Game comes in – and shock-horror, it’s analog. ![]() project_headline Card game that's big in Japan.project_leader Takeo Inamura and Takeshi Muranaka, Co-founders. ![]()
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