Schwein gehabt?
4th Semester
Virtual Reality
2020
Schwein gehabt?
4th Semester
Virtual Reality
2020
Virtual Reality / Game Design / Unity
for “Der unsichtbare Feind” course supervised by Prof. Erich Schöls
in collaboration with Leonie Dunke
mar 2020 – aug 2020
for “Der unsichtbare Feind” course supervised by Prof. Erich Schöls
in collaboration with Leonie Dunke
mar 2020 – aug 2020
Awarded with ADC Talent Award Bronze 2021
People eat an average of 88 kg of meat a year. But what does this have to do with viruses?
Our meat consumption determines breeding behaviour with the result that factory farming has taken over the market. This type of breeding increases the occurrence of virus mutations and the formation of multi-resistant germs. New dangerous pathogens emerge, which are finally transmitted to humans.
In an immersive VR experience, you face an unstoppable wave of infection that breaks out in a densely populated pig fattening facility. Unnoticed, the virus spreads from pig to pig. The only way out is to get to safety in time. But protection from infection also means taking restrictions upon oneself.
With factory farming and wild animal markets, we are breeding the viruses of tomorrow, including swine flu. Now we ask ourselves "Schwein gehabt?" or "Schwein gehabt?".
People eat an average of 88 kg of meat a year. But what does this have to do with viruses?
Our meat consumption determines breeding behaviour with the result that factory farming has taken over the market. This type of breeding increases the occurrence of virus mutations and the formation of multi-resistant germs. New dangerous pathogens emerge, which are finally transmitted to humans.
In an immersive VR experience, you face an unstoppable wave of infection that breaks out in a densely populated pig fattening facility. Unnoticed, the virus spreads from pig to pig. The only way out is to get to safety in time. But protection from infection also means taking restrictions upon oneself.
With factory farming and wild animal markets, we are breeding the viruses of tomorrow, including swine flu. Now we ask ourselves "Schwein gehabt?" or "Schwein gehabt?".
Virtual Reality / Game Design / Unity
for “Der unsichtbare Feind” course supervised by Prof. Erich Schöls
in collaboration with Leonie Dunke
mar 2020 – aug 2020
for “Der unsichtbare Feind” course supervised by Prof. Erich Schöls
in collaboration with Leonie Dunke
mar 2020 – aug 2020
Awarded with ADC Talent Award Bronze 2021
People eat an average of 88 kg of meat a year. But what does this have to do with viruses?
Our meat consumption determines breeding behaviour with the result that factory farming has taken over the market. This type of breeding increases the occurrence of virus mutations and the formation of multi-resistant germs. New dangerous pathogens emerge, which are finally transmitted to humans.
In an immersive VR experience, you face an unstoppable wave of infection that breaks out in a densely populated pig fattening facility. Unnoticed, the virus spreads from pig to pig. The only way out is to get to safety in time. But protection from infection also means taking restrictions upon oneself.
With factory farming and wild animal markets, we are breeding the viruses of tomorrow, including swine flu. Now we ask ourselves "Schwein gehabt?" or "Schwein gehabt?".
People eat an average of 88 kg of meat a year. But what does this have to do with viruses?
Our meat consumption determines breeding behaviour with the result that factory farming has taken over the market. This type of breeding increases the occurrence of virus mutations and the formation of multi-resistant germs. New dangerous pathogens emerge, which are finally transmitted to humans.
In an immersive VR experience, you face an unstoppable wave of infection that breaks out in a densely populated pig fattening facility. Unnoticed, the virus spreads from pig to pig. The only way out is to get to safety in time. But protection from infection also means taking restrictions upon oneself.
With factory farming and wild animal markets, we are breeding the viruses of tomorrow, including swine flu. Now we ask ourselves "Schwein gehabt?" or "Schwein gehabt?".