The Westside Gazette

In new VR, role-playing gives insight into racism

An image of Negro League players in the VR project, “Barnstormers: Determined to Win.” Photo courtesy of Derek Ham

 By Russell Contreras  

(Source AXIOS):

New virtual reality technology is allowing users to experience the triumphs and discrimination of a Negro League-era baseball player — or how to deal with xenophobia as a Muslim on a plane.

Why it matters: The latest generation of put-yourself-in-their-shoes VR projects allows users to take part in scenes that mix game-playing with “what would you do?” scenarios — and that tackle issues such as racism and discrimination by encouraging empathy.

Zoom in: A project released in March called “Barnstormers: Determined to Win” allows users to travel back to the 1940s as a player in the Negro leagues.

What they’re saying: “This isn’t a pity party story. This is a story of these great men on the field,” creator Derek Ham told Axios.

The intrigue: MIT researchers recently developed the VR role-playing project “On the Plane,” which simulates discrimination against a Malaysian American woman.

Yes, but: “Barnstormers” is available on some VR formats, but “On the Plane” won’t be available until late this year at the earliest.

Our thought bubble: Plenty of well-intentioned VR projects, such as a 2021 project called “Criving while Black,” don’t have that many users because so few people have VR gear, Axios Gaming’s Stephen Totilo said.

Zoom out: VR projects on race from just a couple of years ago allow users to observe re-enactments of discriminatory episodes in U.S. history — but offer limited interaction.

Of note: This year a non-VR game, “MLB The Show 23” for PlayStation, Xbox and Switch, features a mode focused on the Negro leagues, showcasing on the on-field experience and bios explaining who the players are.

 

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