The outcome
We design lightweight browser-based experiences for education, training, campaigns, events, product explainers, and lead qualification.

Web games & learning
DDN builds interactive web experiences: browser-based games, quizzes, simulations, and guided tools that teach, qualify, or engage users with a clear business purpose.
The outcome
We design lightweight browser-based experiences for education, training, campaigns, events, product explainers, and lead qualification.


We design lightweight browser-based experiences for education, training, campaigns, events, product explainers, and lead qualification.
Try the thinking
These are intentionally small. Real projects can connect to forms, analytics, CRM fields, member portals, event pages, or training systems.
Experience planner
Engagement fit
0%
Training scenario
A visitor asks a sensitive healthcare question.
A nonprofit visitor is unsure if they qualify.
A trade-show attendee finishes a brand quiz.
Score: 0/3. The lesson is the product.
Pattern match
Matching, scoring, progress, and scenarios can turn dense information into a guided experience people understand faster.
Define what the experience should teach or reveal
Choose the simplest mechanic that supports the goal
Prototype the interaction
Build a fast accessible browser experience
Track engagement and improve
A strong interactive experience uses simple mechanics like scoring, choice, progress, feedback, and replay to make information easier to understand. The goal is not novelty; it is better comprehension and action.
These experiences run in the browser, load quickly, work on mobile, and can connect to analytics, forms, campaigns, events, or CRM workflows when the interaction should lead somewhere.
Not exactly. We focus on web-based interactive experiences for brands, education, training, lead qualification, product explainers, and campaigns rather than console or entertainment-only games.
Healthcare, public sector, nonprofits, education, events, recruiting, cannabis compliance, construction training, and product teams can all use interaction to make complex information easier to understand.
Yes. A game or interactive flow can track choices, score completion, route users to the right next step, or connect to a form when it serves the user experience.
A short conversation is the fastest way to find out if we're the right partner for your project.