The Manila Times

Chinese high school students launch sex education game

-

A sex education game, created by seven Chinese high school students to help teach youths about handling sexual situations, has been downloaded more than 86,000 times since its recent launching.

In the game, players guide characters to make choices, such as whether a girl should sleep at a boy’s home. If they choose the wrong answer, the player will be guided to a page with sex education lessons taught by students.

The game, named “Self-Reliance,” costs 800 yuan ($118). It was produced by seven students from Shanghai High School Internatio­nal Division in East China’s Shanghai Municipali­ty for over four months and was released on Steam, an online gaming platform, on February 9.

Weng Anzhi, one of the developers, told the GlobalTime­s on Sunday that repeated cases of juvenile sexual assault and obscenity made his team wonder whether sexual education had been lacking, either at school or home, across China. Weng said that sex education was necessary for teenagers to learn how to protect themselves, “and a game is the best way to attract teenagers.”

Weng said that before successful­ly launching the game on Steam, they had been refused by several game platforms because “the game’s sex education theme is too sensitive.” But finally, two platforms accepted their game, including Steam.

“The game will also be available on mobile platforms such as the App Store and TapTap,” he added.

According to Weng, they spent more than four months developing the game. “It took two months to prepare relevant profession­al knowledge about sex education, and afterwards we shot all the frames the game needs,” he said.

“The actor and actress were often too shy to keep on performing,” Weng recalled. “At one point, the actress should ask the actor whether he uses a condom before sex, but as the lines were sexually explicit, the performers spent more than 20 minutes finishing a 20-second scene.”

About 60 percent of young people between 15 and 24 years old in China have had sex before the age of 19, while only 10 percent considered themselves familiar with contracept­ion and reproducti­ve health, China National Radio reported in September 2017, citing Shen Aimei, vice president of the Nanjing Maternity and Child Health Hospital in East China’s Jiangsu Province.

The youngest pregnant teenager the hospital treated between January and June of 2017 was only 13 and, during the same period, 141 patients under the age of 20 had induced abortions, according to the report.

 ?? PHOTO: IC ?? Young Chinese students learn how to protect themselves from sexual harassment in a class to publicize sex education and prevention from sexual assault at Beida Huaishu 1 Primary School in Jinan, East China’s Shandong Province.
PHOTO: IC Young Chinese students learn how to protect themselves from sexual harassment in a class to publicize sex education and prevention from sexual assault at Beida Huaishu 1 Primary School in Jinan, East China’s Shandong Province.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines