Erase All Kittens, an online game that teaches kids, especially young girls, coding skills, has signed a distribution deal with one of the UK's largest supermarkets. International Women's Day is an annual date in the diary to support women and girls globally. Erase All Kittens has raised over $1 million in seed funding.

The annual subscription to Erase All Kittens can be purchased via the website with the use of clubcard vouchers. There are 20 million Clubcard Members and 6.6 million using the store's app.

The work of Erase All Kittens is so important in a world where digital literacy is vital to our everyday lives, that we are delighted to team up with them.

Erase All Kittens is an online game that teaches kids professional coding skills, as they set off on an adventure to save kittens in a magical Internet Universe. It has won several awards.

Each teaching method on the game has been designed to spark the imagination of 7-13 year-olds, allowing players to build and fix levels using real source code. The game is designed to appeal to both girls and boys, and the survey shows that most of the girls want to learn more about coding after playing the game.

Over 160,000 people have played the game in 4,000 schools in more than 100 countries, according to the startup. It raised $1 million in seed funding last year, with participation from first investor Christian Reyntjens of the A Black Square family office, as well as angel investors.

Dee Saigal said that there is still a misconception that coding and engineering are more for boys than women. The gender gap will keep growing unless more girls and young women learn how to use technology. We built Erase All Kittens to address this problem on a global scale, and we are excited to be partnering with Tesco to inspire more girls to code and create.

There are 3-4 hours of content in the game. There will be new levels added to teach more skills throughout the year.