Organization:Art Academy: Lessons for Everyone!

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Short description: Video game for the Nintendo 3DS
Art Academy: Lessons for Everyone!
Art Academy - Lessons for Everyone cover.jpg
North American 3DS box art
Developer(s)Headstrong Games
Publisher(s)Nintendo
Director(s)Tancred Dyke-Wells
Producer(s)Kensuke Tanabe
Keisuke Terasaki
Composer(s)Masaru Tajima
James Hannigan
SeriesArt Academy
Platform(s)Nintendo 3DS
Release
  • EU: July 28, 2012
  • AU: August 23, 2012
  • JP: September 13, 2012
  • NA: October 1, 2012
Genre(s)Art training game (edutainment video game)
Mode(s)Single-player

Art Academy: Lessons for Everyone!, entitled New Art Academy in Europe and Australia, is a 2012 video game for the Nintendo 3DS . It is a sequel to Art Academy for the Nintendo DS. This game is the first in the series to include DLC.

Gameplay

Guided by the bearded artist Vince, the player completes tutorials in basic artistic composition. The skills are intended to be transferable to art practice outside the game. Vince instructs in portraiture, landscapes, still life, and architecture. The basic lessons include how to block with color and add detail, how to add light and shade to line drawings, and how to mix paint and create atmosphere. Advanced lessons include expansions on these ideas with shorter exposition from Vince.[1]

Additions to its predecessor include pencil crayons and pastels. The game has a new user interface, a higher resolution, and lets players mix media more easily.[1]

Reception

Reception
Aggregate score
AggregatorScore
Metacritic81/100[2]
Review scores
PublicationScore
IGN8/10[1]
Nintendo Life8/10[5]
Nintendo World Report9/10[3]
Pocket Gamer4/5[4]

The critical reception has been favorable upon the release, scoring 81/100 on the aggregator site Metacritic, based on reviews of 14 critics.[2]

IGN's Chris Schilling found Art Academy to be better and more complete than its predecessor but still capable of more. He wrote that Colors 3D offered more while costing less—he lamented the absence of a 3D painting feature, in particular. Art Academy, Schilling felt, could serve as an educational preparation for games like Colors. He praised the usefulness of the game's classes and their flourishes of art history, and found that the larger Nintendo 3DS XL screen let the player add more detail.[1]

Sequels

A sequel, Art Academy: Sketchpad, was released in 2013 as Wii U eShop app.[6] Another sequel for Wii U, Art Academy: Home Studio, was released in 2015.[7]

References

External links