On January 7, I stopped in front of the Woongjin ThinkBig exhibition booth at Central Hall of Las Vegas Convention Center (LVCC) where CES 2025, the world largest IT and electronics exhibition, was being held. Despite being a small-scale exhibition hall, it was packed full of visitors, arousing curiosity. Woongjin ThinkBig exhibition hall had small tablets lined up, yet visitors feet never stopped. Talking with the Woongjin ThinkBig representative, visitors were drawn to the Korean education company booth in large numbers because of AI-based personalized learning solutions: AI tutoring that adapts to individual student pace, curriculum, and learning style; real-time feedback on student responses rather than waiting for teacher review; engagement mechanics borrowed from gaming that maintain student attention longer than traditional instruction. What drew CES 2025 visitors to an education company booth: the global recognition that AI disruption of education is imminent; parent and educator anxiety about what AI means for their children learning and future careers; the demonstration of AI tutoring that works with children already -- not a future concept but a shipping product; Woongjin ThinkBig success in Korea (the country with among the world highest education investment per child) gives it credibility in demonstrating what AI education looks like when implemented at national scale.