Hello @andyman404 . I am looking to incorporate your game into my doctoral dissertation that is looking to see if games like The Cat in The Hijab have an influence on racial implicit bias. I wanted to get your permission to use your game as part of my study and will give you a credit as the author in my study :)
Hey @andyman404 ! my association, the Cosmic cats, has been asked to install 2 arcade cabinets at an activist event, benevolently. We enjoyed a lot discovering your Cat in the Hijab game, loved its thema, rather close to what we are concerned about, and wish to let people play with it ! Would you happen to be ok with that ? meow ?
And another follow-up : now it shall be featured for about 2 weeks next months, in a small countryside library as part of a program more widely devoted to alternative video games. We'll make a cartel duly explaining and crediting your work and the translator's one. We hope you're still ok with that !
Hello there! I found this on the itch.io homepage and I was intrigued by its premise. However, I'm having issues running it since the Linux version doesn't have the data folder present in the .zip file. The itch app exits with error code 1 when attempting to run it.
That game was my absolute favorite of the whole ResistJam, because it confronted its players with the islamophobia in our world, of which thousands of Muslims suffer everyday. The whole setting of the subway is well chosen, because you can't just simply escape of that, so you have to get through it somehow. You show off several interaction possibilities as well as giving out interesting information about Muslim traditions as well. Especially the discussion about the clothes was very nice to witness! Thank you very much for that game, about which I didn't just wrote an article and uploaded a playthrough video, but also included it in our GOTY 2017 list. It was a fantastic game, so it deserves a place in there, dear Andrew. <3
I had a chance to play this late last night and did a quick video. It really brought home a few topics and opened my eyes. With regards to the game, well, it was very well presented and the graphics are great and I read every single subtitle.
This game was so perfect! I would like to see it be a longer story though. Other than that the game itself talks about things that people need to know about in a gaming platform. Great job! :D
I usually browse itch.io looking for odd games to play and I have to admit, I loved this one! I'd love to see it developed into a full fledged title, it's such a great idea. And the use of cats to represent people is super cute (and softens the message a bit, but still brings forth the relevance.)
Game developer person, you are a mad genius. You're going places with this type of thinking.
I liked this a lot :D I can't exactly call it "fun" but that wasn't really the goal, was it? I thought it was really well made, and although short, the point you were going for was clear! Really great entry, I hope you continue to make stuff :)
Lumps Plays = pop up cartoon commentary for adults. Check me out for a new take on Let's Plays.
This is cool! The aesthetics are great. Good palette, excellent models, nice use of minimalism to convey the subway car, and the sound design really rounds out the setting. The camera work is really polished, too.
I played it a few times. I liked the varied player responses to the insensitive cats getting on the train, including becoming a harasser yourself. I do wish the antagonistic cats' scripts varied a little depending on your responses. They seemed to deliver mostly the same lines on each playthrough regardless of what I said.
Even though too direct for my taste, these events depicted here really happen in real world. I liked attention to detail in graphics like texture and animation (these things are mostly extra for jam games). Some things should be clear though, in Islamic culture hijab is worn not to affect men sexually with hair. Except next to their husband. However as strange as this rule is muslim women are mostly okay with it or their husband being the master because it's their religion. Surprisingly this is not even written in Quran. Some also wear it because it's a tradition or they got used to wearing it.
Not to be misunderstood, I'm okay with whatever thing people want to wear. Just some things actually have functions and not just related to fashion or identity. Like wearing a wedding ring to show that you are married.
Thank you for sharing and giving some background on the hijab in the context of Islamic culture, which does vary quite significantly around the world.
The game mirrors situations faced by different people on the New York City subway. The choices listed in the game for why a woman might choose to wear a hijab were paraphrased from different answers that Muslim-American women gave on their personal reason for why they choose to wear the hijab, despite the discrimination they faced.
A woman in Iran today would probably have a completely different answer for why she is wearing the hijab in public (e.g. she'll get fined and/or punished if she doesn't). I agree - it certainly is affected by country/laws, religious interpretation, and pressure from society and local culture.
If you enjoyed my game, you can see a much better, and much more eloquent real life version of it - a woman beautifully shut down a racist passenger who was harassing a Muslim couple on the NYC Subway just a few days ago: Video with subtitles Article in The Guardian
Hello! I really liked your game, it was an interesting way to show off the rather difficult topic and you did a marvellous job in doing so. Also the simple art style and the dialogue is very well done! I made a let's play of your game here. I can only hope that things get better as society moves forward :)
I think the concept is brilliant. The art style and use of cats can attract so many people, raising awareness for the issue. The dialogue was well written, and the ability to choose to keep your cool during the situation is great. I'm glad some characters react to that. Great great great job!
I live in Iran and I have a question. Do people really treat muslims like this in other countries? If yes (Wow) , it must be difficult for muslim people to live in such countries. Fortunately there are many many nice people who give them hope to live in a country they like.
And thank you for making this game. The message was very understandable and a true tragedy.
Unfortunately, yes, these incidents occur. There has been a sharp increase in the past year, not just against Muslims.
Some scholars believe that the violent backlash against Muslims is driven not only by the string of terrorist attacks in Europe, flood of refugees to Europe, but also by the political vitriol from Donald Trump and far-right politicians/candidates who have repeatedly used Anti-Muslim rhetoric, and are trying to ban immigration from Muslim countries, and enact laws discriminating against Muslims.
Very troubling and relevant, I read in the news yesterday, that the European Court of Justice (the EU's top court) ruled that employers are allowed to ban workers from the "visible wearing of any political, philosophical or religious sign" including headscarves.
I don't know about Europe, but at least here in America, most people are against this type of hate crime, which has been increasing not just against Muslims, but also against Hispanic and Latino people, against the LGBTQ, against African Americans, against women, and even against Asian Americans like myself. The majority of Americans are against these hate crimes, and speak out either in protests and demonstrations, on social media, by calling their politicians, or even by making little games or art.
Unfortunately, there are too many people who do nothing about it, and there are still too many bystanders who do not want to get involved when the hate crime is happening. In some parts of America, the population is not very diverse, and has little exposure to non-Christians or non-Caucasians, other than what they see on TV, and they watch right-wing biased news channels which spread anti-muslim anti-immigrant fear to keep and increase their viewership. It's really a war of media and memes - do we choose fear or do we choose empathy?
How is it in Iran recently? I understand that women are forced to wear the hijab in public or will be punished or fined. Ironically, before 1979, women were banned from wearing the hijab, like some places in Europe currently. What is the opinion among demographic groups in Iran about the forced hijab? What do you think about the future of hijab restrictions as a young Iranian? (Are you allowed to speak about it without getting into trouble?)
Sorry but I can't talk alot about it. because whatever I say about this subject, I may be labeled as a spy. because I don't even know what I shouldn't say. (I know it sounds funny even for ourselves)
Unfortunately people here got quite used to it and they do nothing in particular about this problem. among these some women like to have hijab and there is no obstacle for them about wearing hijab. but some people don't like to have this and they are trying to make it something evident. the real difficulty is for these kind of woman because sometimes they get arrested or get insulted by the police forces.
I don't really know what would happen. I can't even affect a typical problem about my society or country! how can I even think about affecting this important issue!
People here are not very unified. most of the times they don't care about each other. so if society or country conditions ever need any change, they won't do something in particular. the first problem is people and the solution is the same.
nevertheless we are in a tolerable situation than some other countries.
This is a lovely little game. It excels in art style and at conveying its message. As someone who regularly catches public transport through the city, there's a lot of knowledge to take away from this game. Great work!
Good concept, well executed technically and artistically. It really feels like an urban subway wagon and conversations are something you can find every day. I like the way it ends (at least if you are kind).
Thanks! I'm glad you enjoyed it. I used the cute artistic style to try to disarm potentially hostile players a little bit, so that they might be more open to hearing the message that the game has to say.
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Könntest du bitte eine android Version erstellen? Wenn nicht dann ist das auch ok :)
Nein, ich mache keine mobilen Apps mehr. App-Stores bereiten echte Kopfschmerzen.
ok das ist in Ordnung gute Besserung dann :)
Hello @andyman404 . I am looking to incorporate your game into my doctoral dissertation that is looking to see if games like The Cat in The Hijab have an influence on racial implicit bias. I wanted to get your permission to use your game as part of my study and will give you a credit as the author in my study :)
Yes you have my permission. I wish you the best of success with your doctoral dissertation!
Hey @andyman404 ! my association, the Cosmic cats, has been asked to install 2 arcade cabinets at an activist event, benevolently. We enjoyed a lot discovering your Cat in the Hijab game, loved its thema, rather close to what we are concerned about, and wish to let people play with it ! Would you happen to be ok with that ? meow ?
Yes go for it. You have my permission. Thanks and have a great event!
thanks a lot ! sincerely meow <3
we had very nice reactions among the audience, which was very diverse, thanks again !
And another follow-up : now it shall be featured for about 2 weeks next months, in a small countryside library as part of a program more widely devoted to alternative video games. We'll make a cartel duly explaining and crediting your work and the translator's one. We hope you're still ok with that !
Cool thanks!!
This game was very good! The subject matter is something that needs to be addressed and I am glad that you did so correctly.
I'm really glad I played this. It was a nice break from the usual games I play. It had an important message and portrayed it in a really nice way
Hello there! I found this on the itch.io homepage and I was intrigued by its premise. However, I'm having issues running it since the Linux version doesn't have the data folder present in the .zip file. The itch app exits with error code 1 when attempting to run it.
I appreciate the effort. Great game and an important topic was addressed. Love it <3
Super game getting across a lot of topics. Runs well. Looks cute and the sound fits very well. Super job. Well done... :)
That game was my absolute favorite of the whole ResistJam, because it confronted its players with the islamophobia in our world, of which thousands of Muslims suffer everyday. The whole setting of the subway is well chosen, because you can't just simply escape of that, so you have to get through it somehow. You show off several interaction possibilities as well as giving out interesting information about Muslim traditions as well. Especially the discussion about the clothes was very nice to witness! Thank you very much for that game, about which I didn't just wrote an article and uploaded a playthrough video, but also included it in our GOTY 2017 list. It was a fantastic game, so it deserves a place in there, dear Andrew. <3
Best wishes,
Sebastian
I had a chance to play this late last night and did a quick video. It really brought home a few topics and opened my eyes. With regards to the game, well, it was very well presented and the graphics are great and I read every single subtitle.
Regards
Wobblyfootgamer
Thank you for the video!
Great job Andy. I hope people take the message to heart. Thanks for creating and sharing.
This game was so perfect! I would like to see it be a longer story though. Other than that the game itself talks about things that people need to know about in a gaming platform. Great job! :D
I usually browse itch.io looking for odd games to play and I have to admit, I loved this one! I'd love to see it developed into a full fledged title, it's such a great idea. And the use of cats to represent people is super cute (and softens the message a bit, but still brings forth the relevance.)
Game developer person, you are a mad genius. You're going places with this type of thinking.
I liked this a lot :D I can't exactly call it "fun" but that wasn't really the goal, was it? I thought it was really well made, and although short, the point you were going for was clear! Really great entry, I hope you continue to make stuff :)
Lumps Plays = pop up cartoon commentary for adults. Check me out for a new take on Let's Plays.
Thanks for the video!
Hello! How to contact you about it by email? :)
Please use the contact form on my site, and then I can reply to you via email.
This is cool! The aesthetics are great. Good palette, excellent models, nice use of minimalism to convey the subway car, and the sound design really rounds out the setting. The camera work is really polished, too.
I played it a few times. I liked the varied player responses to the insensitive cats getting on the train, including becoming a harasser yourself. I do wish the antagonistic cats' scripts varied a little depending on your responses. They seemed to deliver mostly the same lines on each playthrough regardless of what I said.
Thanks for playing! I appreciate your feedback.
This was a great game with an even greater message :) I'm glad I found this!
I covered it on my YouTube channel. I hope it helps!
Great work! This is a nice way to get people to think about these kinds of interactions and to put themselves in a different pair of shoes.
Covered this game on youtube! Very cute and informative.
Thanks you for the video!
Even though too direct for my taste, these events depicted here really happen in real world. I liked attention to detail in graphics like texture and animation (these things are mostly extra for jam games). Some things should be clear though, in Islamic culture hijab is worn not to affect men sexually with hair. Except next to their husband. However as strange as this rule is muslim women are mostly okay with it or their husband being the master because it's their religion. Surprisingly this is not even written in Quran. Some also wear it because it's a tradition or they got used to wearing it.
Not to be misunderstood, I'm okay with whatever thing people want to wear. Just some things actually have functions and not just related to fashion or identity. Like wearing a wedding ring to show that you are married.
Thank you for sharing and giving some background on the hijab in the context of Islamic culture, which does vary quite significantly around the world.
The game mirrors situations faced by different people on the New York City subway. The choices listed in the game for why a woman might choose to wear a hijab were paraphrased from different answers that Muslim-American women gave on their personal reason for why they choose to wear the hijab, despite the discrimination they faced.A woman in Iran today would probably have a completely different answer for why she is wearing the hijab in public (e.g. she'll get fined and/or punished if she doesn't). I agree - it certainly is affected by country/laws, religious interpretation, and pressure from society and local culture.
If you enjoyed my game, you can see a much better, and much more eloquent real life version of it - a woman beautifully shut down a racist passenger who was harassing a Muslim couple on the NYC Subway just a few days ago:
Video with subtitles
Article in The Guardian
Hello! I really liked your game, it was an interesting way to show off the rather difficult topic and you did a marvellous job in doing so. Also the simple art style and the dialogue is very well done! I made a let's play of your game here. I can only hope that things get better as society moves forward :)
Thanks for the video Kathryn!
You're most welcome! :D
I think the concept is brilliant. The art style and use of cats can attract so many people, raising awareness for the issue. The dialogue was well written, and the ability to choose to keep your cool during the situation is great. I'm glad some characters react to that. Great great great job!
I live in Iran and I have a question. Do people really treat muslims like this in other countries? If yes (Wow) , it must be difficult for muslim people to live in such countries. Fortunately there are many many nice people who give them hope to live in a country they like.
And thank you for making this game. The message was very understandable and a true tragedy.
Unfortunately, yes, these incidents occur. There has been a sharp increase in the past year, not just against Muslims.
Some scholars believe that the violent backlash against Muslims is driven not only by the string of terrorist attacks in Europe, flood of refugees to Europe, but also by the political vitriol from Donald Trump and far-right politicians/candidates who have repeatedly used Anti-Muslim rhetoric, and are trying to ban immigration from Muslim countries, and enact laws discriminating against Muslims.
Very troubling and relevant, I read in the news yesterday, that the European Court of Justice (the EU's top court) ruled that employers are allowed to ban workers from the "visible wearing of any political, philosophical or religious sign" including headscarves.
I don't know about Europe, but at least here in America, most people are against this type of hate crime, which has been increasing not just against Muslims, but also against Hispanic and Latino people, against the LGBTQ, against African Americans, against women, and even against Asian Americans like myself. The majority of Americans are against these hate crimes, and speak out either in protests and demonstrations, on social media, by calling their politicians, or even by making little games or art.
Unfortunately, there are too many people who do nothing about it, and there are still too many bystanders who do not want to get involved when the hate crime is happening. In some parts of America, the population is not very diverse, and has little exposure to non-Christians or non-Caucasians, other than what they see on TV, and they watch right-wing biased news channels which spread anti-muslim anti-immigrant fear to keep and increase their viewership. It's really a war of media and memes - do we choose fear or do we choose empathy?
How is it in Iran recently? I understand that women are forced to wear the hijab in public or will be punished or fined. Ironically, before 1979, women were banned from wearing the hijab, like some places in Europe currently. What is the opinion among demographic groups in Iran about the forced hijab? What do you think about the future of hijab restrictions as a young Iranian? (Are you allowed to speak about it without getting into trouble?)
Sorry but I can't talk alot about it. because whatever I say about this subject, I may be labeled as a spy. because I don't even know what I shouldn't say. (I know it sounds funny even for ourselves)
Unfortunately people here got quite used to it and they do nothing in particular about this problem. among these some women like to have hijab and there is no obstacle for them about wearing hijab. but some people don't like to have this and they are trying to make it something evident. the real difficulty is for these kind of woman because sometimes they get arrested or get insulted by the police forces.
I don't really know what would happen. I can't even affect a typical problem about my society or country! how can I even think about affecting this important issue!
People here are not very unified. most of the times they don't care about each other. so if society or country conditions ever need any change, they won't do something in particular. the first problem is people and the solution is the same.
nevertheless we are in a tolerable situation than some other countries.
Thank you for sharing about this. Stay safe!
This is a lovely little game. It excels in art style and at conveying its message. As someone who regularly catches public transport through the city, there's a lot of knowledge to take away from this game. Great work!
Thanks Olivia!
Good concept, well executed technically and artistically. It really feels like an urban subway wagon and conversations are something you can find every day. I like the way it ends (at least if you are kind).
Thanks! I'm glad you enjoyed it. I used the cute artistic style to try to disarm potentially hostile players a little bit, so that they might be more open to hearing the message that the game has to say.