GoNoodle and Great Wolf Lodge launch story-driven movement adventure for kids
GoNoodle’s new Squatchy-led Great Wolf Stomp mixes movement and mindfulness into a classroom-ready adventure. The pitch lands on scale: 4 in 5 U.S. elementary schools and 14 million kids a month.

Kids are not just watching this one. They are stomping, clapping, howling, and freestyling through it. GoNoodle’s new Great Wolf Lodge collaboration turns that movement into Great Wolf Stomp: The Squatchy Remix!, a story-driven video built for classrooms and homes and led by Squatchy Berger, the GoNoodle character at the center of the adventure.
The partnership was announced on April 29, 2026, and it aims to do more than entertain. GoNoodle said the goal is to unlock joyful movement and give children a shared experience they can use in school or at home, while Great Wolf Lodge framed the project as a way to carry its resort-style family fun into everyday life. The format is simple by design: a kid-friendly video wrapped in narrative, with movement cues that are easy to follow and easy to repeat when attention starts to fray.
That practical angle is what makes the release stand out for mindfulness-minded parents and teachers. The new content treats movement as a reset tool, not just a burst of exercise, and it leans on a recognizable destination brand to keep children engaged. GoNoodle also listed a companion classroom activity, Explore Great Wolf Lodge with Squatchy, signaling that the launch was built as a small package, not a one-off clip.

The scale behind the partnership is hard to miss. GoNoodle says it is used in four out of five U.S. public elementary schools and reaches more than 14 million kids each month. Great Wolf Lodge says it is North America’s largest group of indoor water park resorts, with 23 resort locations across North America and indoor water parks kept at 84 degrees year-round. Great Wolf Lodge also said the content may be distributed across its resorts, hinting that the collaboration could stretch beyond screens in homes and classrooms.
For families and educators, that combination is the point. The video uses a familiar brand, a playful story, and a clear physical script to make movement easier to start and easier to sustain. In a crowded field of kid content, that may be the sharpest trick of all.
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