Commuting in London, whatever your choice of transport, can sometimes make you feel as though you are trapped in a video game. If you’re a cyclist, obstacles such as taxis making sudden u-turns can make any journey to work an adrenaline-fuelled rush. For tube travellers, on the other hand, there’s the race to beat the closing doors. Now, Chromaroma, a new online game backed by the Greater London Authority, promises to take your commute into the virtual world.
Okay, it doesn’t feature graphics of taxis making sudden u-turns into a bike rider’s path, nor does it simulate the day-to-day combat of fighting – in a very discreet, non-contact, polite British way, of course – a fellow passenger for the last vacant seat in the carriage.
What it does do, however, is rather cleverly take data from your Oyster Card or Barclays Cycle Hire Scheme key, and track your movements, allowing you to rack up points through your daily journeys. At the same time, there’s a social networking element, with the game aiming to “connects communities of people who cross paths and routes on a regular basis,” according to the Chromaroma website.
Chromaroma from Mudlark on Vimeo.
The game, which was developed by Mudlark, “encourages people to make new journeys and use public transport in a different way by exploring new areas and potentially using different modes of public transport.
“At its simplest, Chromaroma is about amassing the most points possible. By watching your own travel details you can investigate interesting new ways to travel and exciting new destinations in order to get more points. Grab "multipliers" and bonus points by working with a team, building up connections with fellow passengers and discovering mysteries that are attached to locations on your routes.
“Beyond competition and conquest, Chromaroma's gameplay opens up the beauty in the city's transport flows and reveals to its most persistent players some of the mysteries of travel, and even the strange characters travelling through the tunnels in the centre of the system, who may hold the secrets to your city.”
Another aspect of the game is that it forces players to rethink their travel patterns and encourages them to switch to more environmentally friendly modes; yes, you can acquire points for a quick tube journey between two stations, but you’d get more if you got off a stop or two early and walked the rest of the way or completed the journey by Boris Bike.
You can find out more about the game, including how to sign up, here.
Another rallying imitator ...
Between failing to distinguish kids pedal cars from cars, and failing to distinguish illegal (unregistered / no MOT) cars from cars....
I've got the 900 lumen version of the front light. Even when the cam lever is closed properly, it doesn't grip the light well. The first one let...
the Rapha's Excess Collection is bullshite. MAAP did the exact same. It is sold like there is a left arm of a jacket lying on the floor, We will...
Chuck Berry?
I suspect you are right. But no harm in hoping.
Apologies for the oversight there, it's been corrected. Obviously it should have said 97ft🤦♂️
The more this Nash gezzer opens his mouth the worse he comes across. The mans passion for green issues clouds his judgement on common decency!
Simon Nash needs to just stick to making the produts and seriously step back from social media and all the marketing. He's an absolute liability to...
Even I would say 'report horse ramming to the police ' because just ignoring that report is viewed as less acceptable than if it was a cyclist -...