Toronto Star

HITLER: THE BOARD GAME HIT

A game about fascism’s rise becomes a bestseller thanks to the U.S. election,

- JONAH ENGEL BROMWICH THE NEW YORK TIMES

I was house-sitting for my brother this summer when I saw something suspicious: a box in his living room emblazoned with the words “Secret Hitler.”

On his return, I confronted him. “What in God’s name is that?” I asked, pointing at the box. “It’s a board game,” he said, rolling his eyes. More specifical­ly, Secret Hitler is a social deduction game, one that has caught on quickly since it began to ship to players last summer. It’s like Mafia, or Werewolf, or other games in which players try to identify a traitor in their midst.

In this version, anywhere between five and 10 players are divided into two uneven teams: a larger team of liberals and a smaller team of fascists. (There are no antifa.) One player is chosen as Secret Hitler. The fascists, aware of their leader’s identity, work to install him by fooling the liberals, who are kept in the dark.

The makers of the game have raised close to $1.5 million (U.S.) since announcing it on Kickstarte­r in November 2015. It briefly became the top-selling item in the toy and game category on Amazon when it launched, and it recently sold out its second print run. (The company does not publish sales data, but the money they have raised suggests that they have sold tens of thousands of copies.)

The game was conceived in early 2015 and boosted by its associatio­n with Max Temkin, 30, who is one of the creators of the provocativ­e party game Cards Against Humanity. But Secret Hitler benefited from another, unforeseen trend: a significan­t surge in interest in fascism around the 2016 election, which also saw brisk sales of dystopian literary classics and a rejuvenate­d discussion of the movement that brought leaders such as Hitler and Mussolini to power.

Secret Hitler also arrived amid a renaissanc­e for tabletop games, which have found new purchase among adult consumers. According to Evelyn Rodriguez, a market researcher at Euromonito­r Internatio­nal, people 18 and over have been steadily playing more board games in the past several years, with sales continuing to pick up for titles such as Settlers of Catan and Enigma.

Independen­t games in particular have grown in popularity, Euromonito­r data showed, as Kickstarte­r has become a hub for creators with ideas that may be too risky or too strange for traditiona­l publishers. On the crowdfundi­ng platform, creators can raise money while also finding an audience for idiosyncra­tic titles and getting feedback from potential buyers as games are still in developmen­t.

The secret ingredient in Secret Hitler’s developmen­t was a round of binge-watching. Sometime in late February or early March 2015, one of its creators, Mike Boxleiter, 32, spent a weekend with the Steven Spielberg-produced Second World War miniseries Band of Brothers.

Boxleiter, Temkin and a third creator, Tommy Maranges, had been obsessing over the intricacie­s of deception games. When Boxleiter returned to their shared office on Monday after having watched 705 minutes of Americans battling Germans, he had an idea for a new game, based on Hitler’s rise to power. The group had a playable prototype of Secret Hitler 48 hours later.

“It was a month before even Hillary announced,” Maranges, 27, said.

“It truly was like, what if we made a game about the

“I advised them not to call (the game) that . . . My exact words were perhaps a bit more colourful.” LUKE CRANE KICKSTARTE­R’S HEAD OF GAMES

past, and not about any other time in history.”

They set up a Kickstarte­r campaign on Nov. 23, 2015, with a goal of raising $54,450 to print its first run of the game. In 24 hours, it had raised more than twice that amount.

By the time the game began shipping, in August 2015, it had attracted more than 30,000 backers, making it one of the five most widely supported tabletop games in Kickstarte­r’s history. (The game is not yet available overseas, but it does not include any Nazi symbols or images of Hitler, making it more likely to be accepted in countries such as Germany.)

Though it is easier for edgy games to find support at Kickstarte­r, even people at the crowdfundi­ng site were unpersuade­d by the name at first.

“I advised them not to call it that,” said Luke Crane, Kickstarte­r’s head of games. “I said don’t call it that. My exact words were perhaps a bit more colourful.”

He said that even with the success of the game, he still knew some people who would not play it because of its name. But he added that it was clear that the game’s creators had tapped into a topic of discussion in a way that was difficult to achieve, even among the subset that reach to do so.

Secret Hitler’s creators are aware that some consumers will not find any humour in the game’s title, either because Nazis are not a laughing matter or because of fears about the growing visibility of white supremacis­ts and other extremists since the election of U.S. President Donald Trump.

The game-makers have not been shy about linking the game to the president.

At the website, they advise those who “don’t think there’s anything funny or cool about fascism” to address complaints to the White House. They have also sent copies of the game to senators and released a Trump administra­tion expansion pack, with cards for some members of the administra­tion. It was quickly outpaced by news events, given that there are cards for Steve Bannon and Sean Spicer, who left the White House over the summer.

None of the game’s creators, who are based in Chicago, voted for Trump. Temkin, who has worked on Democratic campaigns, said he does not think he knows anyone who did — and his victory took the game-makers by surprise. He said they even felt a twinge of regret about their timing.

“Oh, it’s too bad that when this game comes out, Donald Trump won’t be relevant to American politics anymore because it would be great marketing for us,” Temkin remembered thinking.

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Secret Hitler does not actually display any Nazi imagery, making it more likely to be accepted in countries such as Germany.
Secret Hitler does not actually display any Nazi imagery, making it more likely to be accepted in countries such as Germany.
 ?? MEOPOLESMA­GAZINE/CREATIVECO­MMONS ?? The makers of Secret Hitler have raised close to $1.5 million (U.S.) since announcing the game on Kickstarte­r in November 2015.
MEOPOLESMA­GAZINE/CREATIVECO­MMONS The makers of Secret Hitler have raised close to $1.5 million (U.S.) since announcing the game on Kickstarte­r in November 2015.
 ?? MEOPOLESMA­GAZINE/CREATIVECO­MMONS ??
MEOPOLESMA­GAZINE/CREATIVECO­MMONS

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada