# Part 3: How We Get There (Example Game)
```{warning}
The tutorial game is under development and is not yet complete, nor tested. Use the existing lessons as inspiration and to help get you going, but don't expect out-of-the-box perfection from it at this time.
```
```{sidebar} Beginner Tutorial Parts
- [Introduction](../Beginner-Tutorial-Overview.md)
Getting set up.
- Part 1: [What We Have](../Part1/Beginner-Tutorial-Part1-Overview.md)
A tour of Evennia and how to use the tools, including an introduction to Python.
- Part 2: [What We Want](../Part2/Beginner-Tutorial-Part2-Overview.md)
Planning our tutorial game and what to consider when planning your own.
- *Part 3: [How We Get There](./Beginner-Tutorial-Part3-Overview.md)*
Getting down to the meat of extending Evennia to make your game.
- Part 4: [Using What We Created](../Part4/Beginner-Tutorial-Part4-Overview.md)
Building a tech-demo and world content to go with our code.
- Part 5: [Showing the World](../Part5/Beginner-Tutorial-Part5-Overview.md)
Taking our new game online and letting players try it out.
```
In part three of the Evennia Beginner tutorial we will go through the actual creation of
our tutorial game _EvAdventure_, based on the [Knave](https://www.drivethrurpg.com/product/250888/Knave) RPG ruleset.
If you followed the previous parts of this tutorial series you will have some notions about Python and where to find and make use of things in Evennia. We also have a good idea of the type of game we will create.
Even if this is not the game-style you are interested in, following along will give you a lot
of experience using Evennia and be really helpful for doing your own thing later! The EvAdventure game code is also built to easily be expanded upon.
Fully coded examples of all code we make in this part can be found in the
[evennia/contrib/tutorials/evadventure](../../../api/evennia.contrib.tutorials.evadventure.md) package. There are three common ways to learn from this:
1. Follow the tutorial lessons in sequence and use it to write your own code, referring to the ready-made code as extra help, context, or as a 'facit' to check yourself.
2. Read through the code in the package and refer to the tutorial lesson for each part for more information on what you see.
3. Some mix of the two.
Which approach you choose is individual - we all learn in different ways.
Either way, this is a big part. You'll be seeing a lot of code and there are plenty of lessons to go through. We are making a whole game from scratch after all. Take your time!
## Lessons
```{toctree}
:numbered:
:maxdepth: 2
Beginner-Tutorial-Utilities
Beginner-Tutorial-Rules
Beginner-Tutorial-Characters
Beginner-Tutorial-Objects
Beginner-Tutorial-Equipment
Beginner-Tutorial-Chargen
Beginner-Tutorial-Rooms
Beginner-Tutorial-NPCs
Beginner-Tutorial-Combat-Base
Beginner-Tutorial-Combat-Twitch
Beginner-Tutorial-Combat-Turnbased
Beginner-Tutorial-AI
Beginner-Tutorial-Dungeon
Beginner-Tutorial-Monsters
Beginner-Tutorial-Quests
Beginner-Tutorial-Shops
Beginner-Tutorial-Commands
```