For many years kids have amused themselves with a history-based video came named “Oregon Trail”.

Loyola University student Dominic Lynch shares details about one professor’s modified version of this classic.

…A New York University professor has developed a video game called “The Migrant Trail,” in which students can experience the perils of what it’s like to cross the U.S.-Mexico border illegally.

Like most video games, it includes danger and obstacles – blistered feet, scorpion bites, dehydration, being spotted by ranchers. And in the end, when the U.S. Border Patrol rolls up – game over.

Professor Marco Williams describes his video game as a chance for students to experience and truly understand the human toll of U.S. immigration policy.

The video game – which can be played free online at TheUndocumented.com – is relatively new, and is slowly being embedded into public schools. For example, today it’s used as an educational tool in a couple of schools with high Latino student populations, Williams told The College Fix in an interview.

“I asked myself, ‘How can I reach young people about issues like this?’” said Williams, with NYU’s Tisch School of the Arts.

In the game, users can choose to play someone crossing the border illegally, or a border patrol agent. It uses comic-book inspired graphics, but flashes real-life images here and there of border patrol agents, immigrants suffering from ailments, and decomposed body parts of those who died crossing the border.

Agents are tasked with the goal to “catch migrants, administer first aid, and retrieve the dead.”

The game-play style pays homage to Oregon Trail, but instead of fixing a broken axle or giving the oxen water, players die in the Sonoran Desert of heat exhaustion or have their dreams of life in America crushed by border patrol agents.

Those who play as migrants can choose from eight different characters, each with their own background and reason for crossing the border, such as the hope of a better job or to be with loved ones. The game aims to produce a greater understanding of who crosses the border, and why, Williams said.

The objective of the border patrol agents is to apprehend and tend to the migrants while the migrants try to avoid capture and make it to a “pickup point.”


 
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