Minecraft wants kids to get into good trouble with civil rights roleplays

By 02/03/2026
Minecraft wants kids to get into good trouble with civil rights roleplays

Minecraft is adding an interactive twist to Black History Month. The sandbox game’s scholastic division, Minecraft Education, has released a historical learning experience that recreates pivotal moments from the Civil Rights movement.

The name of the experience, Lessons In Good Trouble, derives from a quote spoken by the late John Lewis, the long-serving Georgia Congressman who played a pivotal role in the African American struggle for liberation. Good Trouble players will get firsthand looks at notable events from the Civil Rights movement by walking across the Edmund Pettus Bridge with Lewis and sitting on a Birmingham bus with Rosa Parks.

Lessons In Good Trouble is not just a lesson in American civil disobedience. The experience takes players across the world, giving them face time with blocky depictions of social justice pioneers like Malala Yousafzai, Nelson Mandela, Mahatma Gandhi, and Emmeline Parkhurst.

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Want to change the world IRL? Start in Minecraft,” reads a tweet from the game’s official X account. “In the free Good Trouble DLC, explore global civil rights movements, meet changemakers, and learn how to stand up, speak out, and build a better world.”

Atlanta educators Felisa Ford and Natasha Rachell first developed Lessons In Good Trouble in 2020, when the George Floyd protests compelled consumer tech platforms to center Black lives. Ford and Rachell updated the experience last year, and Minecraft highlighted it at the start of Black History Month 2026.

Educational experiences within Minecraft date back to the days of Stampylonghead. In 2016, developer Mojang launched the initial version of what is now Minecraft Education. By turning blocky worlds into polished, rigorous visual aids, Minecraft is helping teachers serve the educational needs of kids who don’t always connect with traditional lessons.

Active learning is a hot topic in schools, and Minecraft is making itself part of the conversation. Educators who want to teach Lessons in Good Trouble can find it in the Minecraft Education library.

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