The Star Malaysia

Detective game apps turn out great for socialisin­g

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BEIJING: Detective game apps are springing up in China, bringing out the Sherlock Holmes in users and providing social outlets for aspiring sleuths, China Daily reported.

In February 2018, an app named Wo Shi Mi (literally “I’m a secret”) was launched on WeChat, a social media platform, and on both the app stores of Android and Apple in June, becoming the first detective social game app in China.

Several similar apps followed suit, such as Juben Sha (scripts of murder) and Xijing Da Zhentan (playing famous detectives).

These apps provide users with online platforms to act as detectives in different crime stories and find the truth through interactio­n with other players, known or unknown to each other.

Unlike location-based games, users need to read the scripts and discuss the cases on the app. Clues are directly given to them, and a click of the button will provide all the informatio­n needed. With the help of technology and the Internet, it’s also easier to gather enough people for a game, the newspaper reported yesterday.

Zhao Lin, the initiator of the Juben Sha app, said users of the game mainly come from first-and second-tier cities, and that every day about 50,000 people use the app.

Zhao thought that the main reason behind the boom in detective game apps is their social aspect.

Zhang Wenping, a postgradua­te student at the Ocean University of China in Qingdao, east China’s Shandong Province, is a devoted Juben Sha player. He regards socialisin­g as the most appealing part of the app.

“To me, it’s not only a game, but a way of meeting more people as well as maintainin­g my current social network,” Zhang was quoted as saying.

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