Tropical America, game titles on American history unspoken.

. Hacktivism

10/11/02 Tropical America, videogame on American history unspoken.
Tropical America is a game that wants to tell the story of the Americas for what it was. Presented at the conference 'Race in digital space', takes its name from a mural by David Alfaro Siqueros, deleted in Los Angeles in 1932 and aims to encourage the player to explore the causes and effects of the removal of the history of those lands. From the battles of Bolivar to the myth of El Dorado at the poems of Sor Juana de la Cruz, Tropical America reveals a moment forgotten, namely the birth of contemporary life cross-cultural. The game begins as just before a killing (as in most of the shoot-em-up), but after a massacre history, that of the El Mozote massacre in El Salvador in 1981, where more than 1,000 people died for ' attack Atlacatl Battalion, an event that is taken as primary thrust to continue the game made in English and Spanish. You can hire a male or female avatar, and moves in a unique graphics, which follows the folk art of those places made carving the wood, and made digitally through a vectorial representation. The product will be launched on 14 October, the anniversary of the 'discovery of America') and is powered by OnRamp Arts, an organization of new media art non-profit organization, whose goal is to produce digital media projects that connect the new technologies with the arts and local communities.