Dudubä, Fofefa, and the Adibä Gang take children through mathematics, physics, astronomy, and biology — one good deed at a time. No dumbing down. No preaching. Just stories that stick.
Keeper of good sleep. Owns the most complete set of cradle songs in the known universe.
Origin unknown. Probably from a quiet corner of the Dreamland Favorite tea blend.
The burrow deer. Slow, precise, and always finds the right path through complex terrain.
Keeper of records. The director. Contact person for the rest of the world.
The doggo. Loyal beyond reason. Knows when something is wrong before you do.
Orders of magnitude explained through honey bees. Fractions through cookies. Geometry through adventures in strange lands.
Gravity, momentum, and energy — not as equations, but as things that happen to characters you care about.
The night sky isn't just stars — it's a map, a story, and a reminder that we're very small and very lucky.
How living things work, grow, and fit together. Gardens, ecosystems, the strange beauty of bodies.
Empathy. Kindness. Asking for help. Eating your veggies. Sharing cookies. No lecture — just stories that embody it.
Written by Heiti Kender — co-creator of Disco Elysium — and illustrated with warmth and precision, Fofefa began as a 640-page Estonian book and grew into an English-language universe available on three continents.
The Adibä Gang has chapters about everything from why you should help your neighbor to how a photon travels. They are funny. They are kind. They don't explain things away — they sit with the mystery.
"There is a lot of talk about helping others, asking for help, answering the call for help — and paragraphs and paragraphs about empathy, eating your veggies, being good, and cookies."
— From Fofefa: The Book of Good
The Adibä Gang has 173 chapters. Real revenue. A global audience. And now, an operating system built to run it at scale — autonomously, daily, without friction.