The core challenge of minimally invasive surgery lies in the surgeon's need to perceive and manipulate the three-dimensional spatial structures within the patient's body through the two-dimensional display of an endoscope. This demands a high degree of hand-eye coordination, precise motor control, and spatial imagination capable of mentally reconstructing three-dimensional images from two-dimensional data. This "two-dimensional to three-dimensional" mapping and manipulation skill can be significantly improved through specific training. Simulation training systems, by providing a risk-free virtual environment and immediate feedback, have become an indispensable part of modern medical education. Our "I Am a Great Doctor" exhibit brings this core experience of professional training to the public on a compact 500*500*800mm operating table. Participants will hold a handle that highly simulates the feel of real endoscopic operation, facing a three-dimensional virtual anatomical scene (such