Article 712EZ I tried out a virtual Halloween festival – and got more than I bargained for

I tried out a virtual Halloween festival – and got more than I bargained for

by
Keza MacDonald
from Technology | The Guardian on (#712EZ)

Ghost Town Pumpkin Festival began as a lockdown project and has now become an annual gaming tradition. My children and I paid it a visit

In an attempt to avoid spending 80 to walk around a local park with my children to see some underwhelming spooky decorations, and having failed for the fifth year in a row to secure a ticket to a Scottish farm to tramp damply around looking at pumpkins, I tried something different with my kids this Halloween: a virtual pumpkin festival.

Ghost Town Pumpkin Festival was first created in the depths of the 2020 pandemic, when game developer Adam Robinson-Yu's real-life neighbourhood pumpkin festival was cancelled. (Yu also made the excellent and equally autumnal A Short Hike.) Since then, it has returned for a few weeks every year, letting players come together as adorable ghosts to explore a creepy little micro-world filled with player-created pumpkins. It has improved slightly every year: 2024's big addition was a haunted house escape room, which took me and my kids a good hour to figure out, and this year there's a movie theatre that plays eerie silent films for a roomful of nobody.

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