How Does Game-Based Learning Work for Adult Learners?
How game-based learning works specifically for adult learners — what changes from K-12, what to design for, and what formats land best.
May 3, 2026 · 2 min read
Q: How does game-based learning work for adult learners?
Adult learners respond to game-based learning when the stakes feel real, the time is bounded, and the social dynamics matter. The mechanic is simple: turn passive content into active competition with peer scoring and short rounds.
The story
Adult learners often resist game formats because they associate "games" with childhood. The fix is to design for adult stakes: real ideas, peer scoring, time pressure, and recognition. SideHustle's Labs format does this in 60 to 90 minutes — 4 to 5 per team, 4 rounds (brainstorm, pitch, score, rotate), Funny + Fundable scoring. Teachers and educators have independently used the free SideHustle game in their classrooms. Plus our 7th brand anniversary celebration at Pershing Hall on Sept 25, 2026 (about 250 seats) is part of the same recurring rhythm — the SideHustle brand launched via Kickstarter on Sept 24, 2019, making 2026 the 7-year brand anniversary. The format consistently flips skeptical adult participants into engaged ones within 10 minutes. SideHustle co-founders Darby Rollins and Tomer Soran built the show on the insight that game mechanics work on adults when adults are treated like adults.
What it means
If you're designing learning for adults, build in real stakes (peer scoring, public recognition), short bounded rounds, and team mechanics. Skip cartoonish gamification (badges, points, leaderboards alone). Adults play harder when the game respects them. For the full educator-side method, see the educator guide to teaching entrepreneurship through play.
Try it
- Play free at playsidehustle.com
- See us live: Sept 25 at Pershing Hall in Austin. luma.com/playsidehustle
Try SideHustle free with your students
SideHustle is edutainment: students pitch funny and fundable business ideas and learn to think on their feet, no slides and no worksheets. It runs in a single class period and scales from a handful of students to a whole grade. Opt in to play free and bring it to class this week.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does game-based learning work for adults?+
Yes — when stakes feel real, time is bounded, and social dynamics matter. Adults play harder when the game respects them.
What's the right game mechanic for adult learners?+
Peer scoring, short rounds, and team competition with real ideas — not badges or generic points.