However at the end part of the game was very interesting! I did get scared here and there. Thanks for making an awesome game! Keep up the good work! Well, two : change the bright eye-searing red color of this site.
I was partially color blind after reading that 16 paragraph story. And two - If you're building a world where this game doesn't exist,. I think your story would work better if you added something like " This is the only working copy found, I cleaned the code up as best as I could to get it to run and install correctly, and uploaded it here to preserve it ".
Also Also, the 3D presented in the game is true 3D, which wasn't possible at the time. The Theater Improved. A downloadable game for Windows.
More information. Status Released Platforms Windows Rating. Comments Log in with itch. The Theater: Autism. Suspended account 1 year ago. Show post LtGray 2 years ago. Juega Po Official days ago. Xaelifor days ago. So it is possible to reach other levels without any sort of cheats? LordofNope 2 years ago. Hey, I played your creepy pasta in a video I made. Hope you enjoy it :.
Strange and weird in all the right places! Flamez Plays 2 years ago. Are you looking for a fun way to get your acting students to think on their feet? Here are five games all theatre teachers should know about. This quirky, fast-faced game will challenge your students to think on your feet. All students stand in a circle shoulder to shoulder. You can repeat the actions as many times as you want. If a student gets the word or action incorrect, they are then out. The last person standing wins.
This is a great game to get those creative juices flowing in your students! One student is instructed to stand at the front of the room and combine an action with a noise. For example, they could click their tongue and raise and lower their left arm. The joining students can form in any position around the original player but must all be connected somehow a hand on the shoulder, laying on their feet, etc.
The teacher then goes around and views each tableau before choosing a winner for that round. The winning team receives a point. Every student from the team must participate in the tableau or the team will be disqualified from the round. Tip: Remind the students about the use of levels and facial expressions at the start of the game. Choose two to four students to start onstage and give them a scene to start such as lifeguards rescuing someone from drowning.
The other actors will need to improvise and join in the new scene. It must be completely different to the scene that was happening before. The teacher selects one person to be a gravekeeper, and they stand off to the side. The other students lie on their backs on the ground with their eyes open. They must stay completely still, with a straight face. They are not allowed to touch the person on the ground. Anyone they succeed at making laugh is alive again and joins the gravekeeper in going around and trying to make the other students laugh or speak.
This is a great game for helping your students learn stage directions. The teacher calls out stage directions, such as downstage right or center. Any students who move there otherwise are eliminated. Try to keep the calls coming quickly to keep the game interesting. The teacher selects one student to sit in a chair and face away from the rest of the group.
Ask the student in the chair to close their eyes. Once all three students have gone, the student in the chair must guess who each one was. Choose two to three actors to be onstage. Choose a director for each actor. The directors sit at the back, and the actors play out the scene at the front. The teacher assigns the actors a scene and the first direction, and the scene begins. The actors can only do what their directors say. The directors each take a turn narrating the scene, and the actors must act it out.
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