The Jerusalem Post

Cult game Catan seeks to save the world

- • By THIN LEI WIN

ROME (Reuters) – A cult German board game whose fans include Hollywood actors Mila Kunis and Woody Harrelson may not seem like the most obvious vehicle for raising awareness about the importance of preserving crop diversity.

But that is what the makers of “Catan” are seeking to do with a new version of the popular game in which players compete to settle an imaginary uncharted island, gaining points for building settlement­s, and accumulati­ng and trading resources.

“Catan – Crop Trust,” which launches on Thursday, requires players to balance the goal of farming and harvesting crops with the collective aim of preserving diversity by saving some of their seeds in a vault.

Players who fail to do so endanger diversity, threatenin­g the food supply and the survival of the island at the center of the new game, developed with the caretakers of the Svalbard Global Seed Vault.

“The unique thing is that you can’t win with only pursuing your own interest,” said Marie Haga, executive director of the Crop Trust, which looks after the world’s largest seed bank.

“You’ve got to make sure you don’t deplete the natural resources in the game. Because then everybody loses,” she told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

Nearly a million seed samples are stored in the Svalbard vault, located above the Arctic Circle, which was establishe­d to protect the world’s plant diversity in the event of disaster.

Proceeds from the sales of the new game will go to the Crop Trust, which supports seed banks around the world, and buyers will also get an almanac on the history of the Svalbard vault.

Experts have raised concerns over the resilience of the global food system in the face of climate change because humans now rely on fewer food sources than 50 years ago.

“It’s a very fundamenta­l thing for mankind that we understand how basic crop diversity actually is, and we need to use all channels to reach out to people to create the understand­ing,” said Haga.

Games are “uniquely capable of helping people experience the complexiti­es of future risks,” according to Pablo Suarez, associate director for research and innovation at the Red Cross/Red Crescent Climate Centre in the Netherland­s.

“We can accomplish much more by infusing serious fun into our exploratio­n of global challenges like long-term food security,” said Suarez, who has developed games to help people understand solutions to the impact of climate change.

“Catan – Crop Trust” – the result of nearly two years of collaborat­ion – is an add-on to the original game, which was launched more than 20 years ago in Germany and has sold about 27 million units in more than 40 languages.

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