What does a child actually do on Kubrio each week?
Each week your kid picks a real project and builds it, step by step, until it's done and signed with their name. They might direct a short film, run a simulated fund, publish a magazine, or build a game. The AI Crew asks sharper questions along the way. Your kid makes the calls.
A week is one real project
Every week is a sprint: a small founder simulation where your kid builds one real thing and keeps it. Not a worksheet. A thing with their name on it.
It starts with the kid's idea or decision. A girl decides her short film is about a dog who runs a detective agency. A boy picks the three stocks his simulated fund will bet on this week. Another kid sets the theme for the magazine she's publishing. The hand moves first.
Then they build, step by step, across the days. Storyboard, then shoot, then cut. Pick holdings, track them, write the investor note. Draft articles, lay out pages, hit publish. By the end of the week there's a finished thing they can show, share, and point to.
The AI Crew amplifies, it doesn't take over
Three thinking partners ride along inside the apps: Krea the creative, Tek the maker, Brio the questioner. They don't hand over answers. They ask the better question.
Stuck on a film's ending? Krea asks what the dog would do if the case went cold, then your kid writes it. Fund down 4%? Brio asks what changed, and the kid decides whether to hold or sell. The making stays in the kid's hands. That's the whole point of the AI Crew.
The studio is full of tools for this: Sketchling turns a kid's drawing into animation, the AI Walkie Talkie lets them talk a hard problem through out loud, and Young Founders and Book Club give projects somewhere to grow. Each one builds a real skill the kid chose to chase.
Two ways to work, always the kid's call
Some weeks a kid wants quiet. The studio runs at their own pace, no clock, no crowd. Other weeks they want heat: Summer Sprints add healthy deadlines and a bit of friendly competition alongside kids around the world. Same real projects, more momentum.
Neither is the default. Your kid chooses which mode fits the week.
Once a week, Claire (the family's AI coach) has a short live voice check-in with your kid about what they built, then sends you the summary. You see the real thing, and the thinking behind it.
Frequently asked questions
Does the AI make the project for my kid?
No. The AI Crew asks questions and offers angles, but every decision and every build step is the kid's. The finished thing carries their name because they made it. AI amplifies the initiative; it never replaces the hand.
How long does a project take?
One week. Each sprint is sized to start and finish a real thing within the week, so your kid always has something done to show rather than an open-ended task that drifts.
What if my kid doesn't want competition?
Then they work in the quiet studio at their own pace, with no deadlines or crowd. Summer Sprints with friendly competition are always optional and always the kid's choice, week by week.
What kinds of projects can a kid pick?
Real ones: directing a short film, running a simulated fund, publishing a magazine, building a game, and more across the studio apps. The kid picks the idea and the direction; the project is theirs end to end.
How do I know what my kid did?
Claire, the family's AI coach, does a short live weekly voice check-in with your kid and sends you a summary. You also see the finished project itself, with your kid's name on it.




