WASHINGTON, DC.- A new mission-based, alternate reality or big game, called Pheon, will debut in September at the Smithsonian American Art Museum. A variation on the classic game Capture the Flag, Pheon is a competition to obtain the games virtual talisman, the pheon, which will occur online and at live events during the course of a year. Pheon, like other mission-based games, revolves around the completion of tasks, the making of objects, discovery and documentation. It follows the successful run of the museums first alternate reality game, Ghosts of a Chance.
Pheon is innovative in that the narrative of the game will be written as it is played. The game is set in Terra Tectus, a virtual world in which two warring factions, Staves and Knaves, struggle to restore balance after the intrusion of Seers, people from the real world. Players will interact with scripted characters, and each players performance will help shape the storyline. To begin, individual players and teams must first determine whether they are Staves or Knaves, then complete various missions focused on the museums art collections, exhibitions and programs to earn points and propel the game. Missions exist on three levelsNeophyte, Acolyte and Lamplight Councilthrough which players must advance, reaching the final stage in which elite players write missions for those at lower levels. The ultimate goal is to attain the pheon, which promises to restore balance to Terra Tectus.
The game will use several popular social networking sites such as Facebook and Twitter, which will be used to convey character plots. Players from all over the world are expected to participate. Fictional excerpts and game lore will be available for download as well. The museum is working with John Macabee of the San Francisco-based CityMystery and mission-based game expert Sean Mahan, creator of the popular game SF0, to develop Pheon, which will be accessed through a portal website,
pheon.org.
The launch event for Pheon is Saturday, Sept. 18, from noon until 6 p.m. at the Smithsonian American Art Museum. Activities for players will include making objects, texting codes and finding clues in a belly-dance performance. The initial game will run for one year and, as with Ghosts of a Chance, the Luce Foundation Center will offer an abbreviated form of Pheon at the museum beginning Nov. 1.