Project course led to the creation of a mobile game – collecting sensor data from the environment using a magic wand
In the yearly Software Project course of the Department of Computer Science students pick an interesting project from options proposed by companies or by Aalto University. The Balance of Magic mobile game started from the students’ desire to do something exceptional in game development.
They wanted to incorporate the real world, augmented reality, mixed reality and the Internet of Things into a single game.
‘The premise was a Bluetooth device, a magic wand, which is connected to a mobile phone and collects sensor values from the real world. The game is played on a real map. As a player moves around he or she can battle the game’s characters approaching on the map. The collected sensor data becomes handy in fights: ice energy mined from the environment can be used to fight a fire character,’ describes Ville Hiltunen, who was responsible for the development of the magic wand.
Antti NurminenThe problem-solving skills exhibited by the team were very impressive
The team made up of eight students first had problems adapting the size of the project to their aims, contents and hourly limits of the course. The ability to follow through with a project plan is one of the most important lessons learned from the course, and there the team received help from the project owner, Aalto University Researcher Antti Nurminen.
‘The problem-solving skills exhibited by the team were very impressive, even though the team encountered many technical challenges due to the project’s large scope and versatility,’ Nurminen explains.
During the project, the student team also learned the importance of the interaction and seamless teamwork: every member must, at all times, be aware of the project’s overall status.
‘Even a small change in the project plan and design or a specific area of the project can have a significant effect on the project on the whole’ says Jouni Osmala, who focused on game graphics and their implementation.
In addition to Hiltunen and Osmala the bold project team’s members included Miro Aurela, Atte Haarakangas, Eero Mänty, Marko Rajala, Stefan Stenstrand and Niclas Vauhkonen. The results of the project are in use in Aalto’s new (Networked Partnering and Product Innovation), and, when applicable, in the EU H2020-funded .
A new Software Project course began once again in September, and have been proposed by partners such as Elisa, Futurice, Relex, Sievo and KONE. Students get to pick the most interesting ones.
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The 2026 Unite! Seed Fund call is officially open, offering funding across three strategic lines: Student Activities, Teaching and Learning, and Research and PhD. Deadline for applications is 20 March 2026.
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