Body of Abstract: The Maize-10-Maze is an interactive visual representation of the maize genome with mutants representing genes along each of the 10 maize chromosomes planted along 10 rows in a cornfield. The life size ‘karyotype’ is open to the public for guided or self-guided tours as an outreach event for one weekend in June 2023 at Florida State University, as part of outreach projects (NSF IOS #2025811 and ). The outreach event also includes displays to introduce the concept and importance of noncoding RNAs in plant and animal genomes. The selected mutants for the maize showcase visually striking plant or seed phenotypes, have agronomic importance, or have major scientific importance, including Knotted1 or lazy plant1, brittle endosperm1, and teosinte branched1. High school and undergraduate college students developed and updated the explanatory placards for each mutant , and undergraduate students prepared poster displays to describe the biological functions of ncRNAs in plant and animal genomes, and explain the relevant maize mutants associated with these biological functions. The event is co-sponsored with the Florida A&M University’s Forestry and Conservation Education (FACE) Summer Program and aims to increase accessibility and longevity of the project through photography and online resources, including the @scienceforyall tiktok page and a website, crazylazycorn.org. The Maize-10-Maze provides an engaging opportunity for students and citizens of all ages to ‘see’ a genome and learn about modern research in the fields of molecular genetics, genomics and plant biology.