Game Design · Maryland

Game Design colleges in Maryland

CampusPin lists 39 U.S. colleges in Maryland that offer Game Design programs. Compare tuition, acceptance rate, and enrollment in the table below, every figure links back to the institution's official IPEDS data.

Game Design teaches you to plan and build playable interactive media, making it a fit for people who pair creative storytelling with systems thinking.

Schools in Maryland that offer Game Design

Game Design programs in Maryland: by the numbers

A quick comparison of the 39 schools listed above, drawn from each institution's published IPEDS data.

Schools listed

39

Public / private

24 / 15

Universities / 2-year

25 / 14

Cities represented

26

In-state tuition range

$3,312–$63,340

Median in-state tuition

$9,772

Figures reflect the schools currently listed and each institution's most recent reported data. Verify current tuition and admissions details with the school before applying.

What you'll study in a Game Design program

  • Game theory and core mechanics, rules, goals, balance, and feedback loops
  • Level design and spatial pacing for player progression
  • Rapid prototyping and iterative playtesting with real users
  • Interactive narrative, story structure, and character development
  • Two- and three-dimensional art, animation, and visual design
  • Gameplay programming and scripting within a game engine
  • Simulation and real-time systems for responsive play
  • User-interface and interaction design for playable media
  • Team-based studio production and a portfolio capstone build

Where a Game Design degree can lead

  • Game Designer
  • Level Designer
  • Game Artist
  • Technical Artist
  • Gameplay Programmer
  • Game Producer

Typical pay: Early-career wages vary by employer, region, and experience (BLS, 2024 special effects artists and animators median $99,800).

Game Design is the study of how interactive entertainment is conceived, structured, and built, from computer and video games to virtual environments and other playable media. Students learn the theory behind games, how rules, goals, and feedback create play, and apply it across turn-based, real-time, and simulation formats. The work blends creative and technical craft: shaping mechanics and level layouts, developing story and characters, producing visual and interactive design, and writing the code that makes a system respond to a player. Coursework typically moves between concept and prototype, so students spend much of their time making playable builds, testing them with real users, and revising based on what people actually do rather than what the designer imagined. This is broader than computer science, which centers on computation and algorithms in the abstract; here, programming and art serve the specific goal of a designed player experience.

Most game design programs award a bachelor's degree, and a bachelor's is commonly the entry point for design and development roles in the field. Students usually progress through studio courses and team production projects, culminating in a capstone in which a small team ships a finished, playable game and presents it as portfolio work; a strong portfolio of completed projects, rather than a license, is what employers generally evaluate, since this field does not require state licensure. Some programs lean toward the art and design side, others toward programming, so prospective students should confirm a program's emphasis and check whether any programmatic accreditation applies. Graduates work at game studios of varying sizes and in adjacent areas that use interactive and real-time technology, such as simulation and training, educational media, and interactive applications, in roles spanning design, level design, art, technical art, gameplay programming, and production.

In federal data for the closely related occupation of special effects artists and animators, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reports a 2024 median wage of $99,800 and projects employment to grow about 1.6% from 2024 to 2034; a bachelor's degree is the typical entry-level education for that occupation. National figures are occupation-wide medians across all experience levels, not starting wages or graduate outcomes.

Find more Game Design schools

Use CampusPin's filter-first search to narrow 39+ Game Design programs in Maryland by tuition, school size, acceptance rate, and campus setting.