We just finished a 25-day free SysML v2 learning challenge, and the entire series is now available for everyone.
First, a huge thank you to everyone who participated, asked questions, shared solutions, and kept the discussion going throughout December and early January. Watching this community work through definitions, debug port connections, and model state machines together has been incredible.
Over the past month, we built Santa’s entire delivery system from the ground up. We explored definitions and usages, connected subsystems with ports and interfaces, modeled complex behaviors with states and actions, and verified requirements across the system. Each day introduced a new SysML v2 concept through practical challenges, and the projects some of you built along the way have been genuinely impressive.
All materials are available
Whether you participated or are just discovering this series, all materials are freely available:
-
Full video playlist (25 episodes): https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLuceG5piNwHG7KBdo02RDPAkJ-ErbzHe0
-
Deep-dive blog posts: https://sensmetry.com/category/advent-of-sysml-v2/
-
GitHub repository with all examples: https://github.com/sensmetry/advent-of-sysml-v2
Syside Cloud is staying open
Good news: due to popular demand, we’re keeping Syside Cloud running for educational purposes. You can sign up for a 30-day educational account and work through the lessons: https://sensmetry.com/advent-of-sysml-v2/
Share your work!
This is where you come in. We’d love to see what you built during Advent or what you’re working on now:
-
Did you complete all the challenges? Share your Santa’s delivery system
-
Modified the examples for your own domain? Show us what you made
-
Applied SysML v2 to a real project? Tell us about it
-
Have questions about specific lessons? Let’s discuss them
Drop your projects, questions, or thoughts in the replies. Let’s keep the momentum going.
Looking ahead
What do you want to see next? More deep dives on specific topics? Live workshops? Integration tutorials? Let us know in the comments.
Thanks again for being part of this adventure. Here’s to building better systems in 2026.