So, working with my coach Lisa, we built one.
What it is: Improv Playground is a web app with AI-driven virtual scene partners and a coach. The alpha has four games: "Yes, And..." (the core acceptance/building skill), Word Association Chains (associative thinking and spontaneity), Story Spine (narrative structure), and Foreign Poet (commitment and bringing out emotions).
To try It: You can play immediately at alpha.improv-playground.com. No account needed. Free registration if you want to save progress. To learn more about it, check out improv-playground.com.
What I'm trying to learn: I'm a learning scientist by background, which shapes how I think about this. I don't believe AI can replace the ensemble experience — the whole point of improv is human connection. But I do think targeted solo practice could help people get more from their real troupe time, the same way a musician does scales between rehearsals.
I want to know: - Are the games actually engaging? - Do they practice skills novice improvisers genuinely need? - Is the AI coach relevant and helpful (and not overbearing)?
This is the first of three planned game suites. Before I build more, I want to know if the approach is sound. Especially curious to hear from anyone with improv teaching or coaching experience — your reaction to the game selection and skill sequencing would be genuinely useful.