Maroon
Maroon — Virtual STEM Lab
A free, research-backed virtual STEM laboratory from Graz University of Technology — explore 18+ interactive experiments in physics, chemistry and computer science. From Coulomb's Law and Faraday's electromagnetic induction to acid-base titration and sorting algorithms, Maroon puts students inside working scientific simulations. Available on Steam (desktop and VR) and in any web browser. No cost, no registration, peer-reviewed educational effectiveness.
Maroon is available on Steam (free) and as a web browser experience at maroon.tugraz.at. The VR version runs via SteamVR — Meta Quest users need a PC connection via Oculus Link or Air Link. The desktop and web versions work without any VR hardware at all, making Maroon one of the few STEM lab tools usable across a standard school ICT room without headsets, with an optional VR upgrade for headset-equipped classes.
What is Maroon?
Maroon is a free, open-source interactive virtual STEM laboratory developed by the GameLab at Graz University of Technology (TU Graz), Austria. It is an academic research project — not a commercial product — which means its development is driven by genuine educational research into how virtual and immersive environments improve STEM learning outcomes. Multiple peer-reviewed papers published through IEEE and Springer validate its pedagogical effectiveness, and the project has been featured in an ORF (Austrian national television) documentary.
The concept is a 3D virtual laboratory room containing experiment stations, each of which teleports the user into a dedicated simulation environment. Currently 18+ experiments are available across physics, chemistry and computer science — with the VR version supporting 6 of those experiments. The platform launched on Steam in March 2025 (v4.3), though its research and web-based development spans back to at least 2017. Users can also access all desktop experiments without Steam at maroon.tugraz.at directly in a browser.
The open-source nature on GitHub means teachers and developers can inspect exactly what the simulations are doing, request new experiments, or contribute improvements. It also means Maroon will never be taken behind a paywall or discontinued for commercial reasons — as long as TU Graz continues to support it.
What Can You Explore?
Three Experiments Worth Knowing
School & Curriculum Value
Maroon's strongest curriculum fit is A-Level Physics — Faraday's Law, Coulomb's Law, electromagnetic induction, waves and optics are all directly on the A-Level specification and notoriously hard to demonstrate convincingly in a school lab. The titration simulation is relevant to both GCSE and A-Level Chemistry practical assessments. For Computing and Computer Science, the sorting algorithm visualisations (bubble sort, quicksort, etc.) and pathfinding algorithms are outstanding tools for making abstract CS concepts visually concrete. A unique advantage: the web version runs in any browser without Steam, headsets or installation — making it accessible in any ICT room, from any device, with no setup friction whatsoever.
| Platform | Steam · Web browser |
| VR | PC VR via SteamVR |
| Price | FREE |
| Developer | GameLab / TU Graz |
| Experiments | 18+ total · 6 in VR |
| Subjects | Physics · Chemistry · CS |
| Web version | ✓ maroon.tugraz.at |
| Open-source | ✓ GitHub |
| Best for | A-Level Physics · GCSE · CS |
