You bring deep expertise to every client engagement — on AI, cybersecurity, or digital transformation. Your content is solid. But clients arrive without the experiential foundation to receive it. One game session at the start changes that dynamic entirely. Play first, teach second. The room is yours before you've opened a single slide.
Running workshops on AI literacy, machine learning concepts, or responsible AI adoption? FuzzNet Labs gives clients hands-on intuition for how neural networks actually learn — before you walk them through the implications.
Delivering bespoke security advisory, kill chain workshops, or threat awareness sessions? Byte Club gives your client room the attacker-defender mental model before you start — so your expertise lands on a foundation, not a blank slate.
Helping organisations navigate change driven by AI or new technology? The game creates genuine curiosity in the room — clients who've played arrive at your strategy sessions ready to engage, not just sit and listen.
You deliver bespoke engagements — not off-the-shelf courses. The game is a differentiator: a high-impact session your clients remember, talk about, and ask for again. It sets you apart from every generic alternative.
You walk in with deep expertise. The content is solid. The frameworks are proven. But a third of the client room is disengaged before you've finished your intro — not because they don't care, but because they have no experiential reference point for any of it. The terminology feels abstract. The stakes feel distant. The mental models aren't there yet.
This isn't an audience problem. It's a sequencing problem. Depth without context slides off. But when someone has already felt how an attack unfolds from the inside — when they've made the decision that opened the breach, when they've built and broken their own neural network — your expertise clicks into something they already understand.
"The game primes them. By the time I start my debrief, they're not a passive audience — they're people with a shared experience who want to know what just happened."
— Cybersecurity ConsultantYou don't redesign your engagement around the game. You drop it in where it adds the most value — as a cold-room opener, a standalone session, or a capstone that makes everything consolidate.
Run the game at the start of your client session. By the time you open your first slide, every person in the room has already made real decisions under pressure, felt the consequences, and built the vocabulary you need to work with. Your expertise lands on a primed room — not a cold one.
Deliver the game as its own client session — especially effective ahead of a strategy workshop, an advisory kickoff, or when onboarding a new group who need shared context before the real work begins. Runs in 90 minutes. No facilitation expertise required.
Use the game at the end of a consulting engagement to let participants apply what they've absorbed in a genuine challenge. The debrief becomes a masterclass — the gaps reveal themselves in real time, and your expertise provides the exact answers the room is now ready to hear.
Each game teaches the real mechanics of its domain — not a simplified analogy, but the actual framework practitioners use. Which means they serve as a rigorous foundation, not a gentle introduction.
"I have customer service reps and accountants actually getting cybersecurity."
— Security Champions Community LeadTry both games free online — same mechanics, same learning depth as the physical edition. When you're ready to add it to your client engagements, physical copies are available for groups of any size.