Source:
https://scmp.com/news/china/policies-politics/article/2072635/game-set-during-taiwans-white-terror-garnering-rave
China/ Politics

Game set during Taiwan’s ‘White Terror’ garnering rave reviews

Horror video game set in island’s martial law period gains an international following

Game developer Yao Shuen-ting shows scenes from his horror game “Detention”. Photo: AFP

As the 70th anniversary of a bloody political purge in Taiwan looms, a new horror video game set during the island’s “White Terror” is winning rave reviews.

“Detention” was created by Taiwanese developers and takes place during the crackdown on opponents by the ruling nationalist Kuomintang, when the now democratic island was still under martial law.

The nightmarish 2-D game starts with the disappearance of a teacher, with players acting as two high school students trying to solve the mystery.

One scene shows a classmate hanging dead in the school auditorium. Another sees one of the students consoling her sobbing mother before entering a room with portraits of faces bleeding from their eyes.

The game “Detention” is set during Taiwan’s martial law period. Photo: AFP
The game “Detention” is set during Taiwan’s martial law period. Photo: AFP

Gamers have praised it as an “emotional and educational” experience – it made the top 10 of popular gaming distribution platform Steam after its release last month, and is still on the bestseller list.

Developer Yao Shuen-ting said his team tried to capture the pervasive fear of a time when family members and colleagues were going missing.

“We want to let players experience the atmosphere through the characters’ perspective ... to come to the conclusion themselves that this was a time when you could die from reading a book,” Yao said.

Next Tuesday is the 70th anniversary of the start of a brutal massacre of anti-government protesters by KMT troops on February 28, 1947, under nationalist leader Chiang Kai-shek.

It was a precursor to decades of purges under Chiang and his son between 1949 and 1987, when martial law was finally lifted.

Victims were often teachers and doctors who were angry with government corruption and turned to underground organisations that created and distributed reading materials seen as subversive.

“Detention” developers said they spoke with their own elderly relatives to help recreate the era, finding out finer details such as the kinds of outfits school officials would have worn.

Yao described it as almost like a film as players delved into the main characters’ inner minds and eventually discovered a disturbing truth.

The game is aimed at players aged 15 or older and can be downloaded from Steam for NT$299 (US$9.70).

It has gained an international following, with half its users from outside Taiwan, including China, Europe, and the United States.

“I don’t think I’ve ever seen such a deep and sensitive view into the dark corners of our inner lives and society,” one overseas gamer wrote in a review on Steam.

Game developer Yao Shuen-ting displays a key figure in his horror video game “Detention”. Photo: AFP
Game developer Yao Shuen-ting displays a key figure in his horror video game “Detention”. Photo: AFP

“This was a very educational and emotional experience, and it just makes me grateful that I did not experience a time and place so terrifying just to express free speech,” another overseas reviewer said.

“Detention” has also hit a nerve at home, where reviewers reflected on Taiwan’s hard-won freedoms and said they hoped such purges would never be repeated.

“Today’s democracy and freedom is built upon bodies whose blood flowed as rivers,” one local player wrote.

Yao said he was surprised how much the crackdown resonated with players, and counted its popularity overseas as a marker of its success.

“They don’t have the historical context so they will be more objective,” he said, adding that some Taiwanese customs featured in the game might throw foreign users.

“They might not know what they’re doing. But they can experience the atmosphere of the time,” he said.

“They might even cry.”