The "eLearning chicken" returns as a tourist in NYC's busiest city, Manhattan. Learn about what makes the big apple one of the best destinations in the world with this quick interaction.
This is super-fun, Samuel! I love the keyboard navigation and that you've incentivized learners to visit each spot by adding an "apple-collecting" feature. Great work! Thanks so much for sharing.
Samuel, this is great! I love the design and keyboard navigation. What an awesome way to use that feature! I also really like how you incorporated video in the pop-ups. So many great ideas for inspiration here. Thanks for sharing!
Really good job!!! Im learning from your example! I hope one day you can do a rundown on how the axis's work! I have been able to re build it, but I still feel, as if I don't understand what I've rebuild in my copy of your's! Great job again!
Hey Justin! I'm not entirely sure how Samuel set up this cool example, but I wanted to chime in and share another way to create a similar effect using Motion Path Animations and Relative Start Point (Tip #7 in the article). I hope that helps!
13 Replies
This is super-fun, Samuel! I love the keyboard navigation and that you've incentivized learners to visit each spot by adding an "apple-collecting" feature. Great work! Thanks so much for sharing.
Thanks, Allison!
Awesome job! So fun!
Samuel, this is great! I love the design and keyboard navigation. What an awesome way to use that feature! I also really like how you incorporated video in the pop-ups. So many great ideas for inspiration here. Thanks for sharing!
I like it! Fun.
Thanks, Everyone!
This is great, the navigation on here is next level.
Impressive, Great fun trying to get all the apples!
Love this! It's very creative.
Really good stuff bro. You did all this on Storyline?
This is insane! Thanks
Really good job!!! Im learning from your example! I hope one day you can do a rundown on how the axis's work! I have been able to re build it, but I still feel, as if I don't understand what I've rebuild in my copy of your's! Great job again!
Hey Justin! I'm not entirely sure how Samuel set up this cool example, but I wanted to chime in and share another way to create a similar effect using Motion Path Animations and Relative Start Point (Tip #7 in the article). I hope that helps!
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