'Deleted: The Game' Takes Web Stalkers for a Ride

Deleted: The Game is more than just another mystery thriller web series. It’s creators at NY-based Gen247 Media call it, “an indie web TV show where you can interact with the characters through their MySpace and Facebook pages, (along with several other fictional sites) and influence how the story progresses.” Throughout this complex alternate reality game (ARG), the producers have seeded a hidden trail of clues in each episode and all over the internet setting up “a massive online treasure hunt of sorts.”

The story begins with a young woman, Tyler Mills (Charlie Miller) , who loses her memory and is looking for her boyfriend Ethan (Shawn Parsons). Sadly, her boyfriend has been “deleted”, meaning his identity has been stolen. What’s a girl to do? Teaming up with her two best friends Nicole (Elia Monte-Brown) and Zac (David Rudd) seems like a good start.

Subscribe to get the latest creator news

Subscribe

Broken down into four episode acts, the series focuses intensely on memory, identity, and time shifting, deftly combining these elements across multiple interaction points throughout the Internet. Directed by indie filmmaker Ryan Gielen, the series runs about $10,000 an episode, despite being “shot entirely with consumer grade camcorders, webcams and phonecams.”

Each episode ends with a question. Answering correctly gets registered players points. And what do you win?

#advanceampads0#

For reasons of personal preference, we will avoid exploring how incredibly creepy it seems to go on a huge web scavenger hunt in order to receive some fake girl’s phone number. But, please, by all means, you go forward with it.

DTG premiered a month ago and is up to Episode 9, so there’s time to get in on the action and actually influence the outcome. Comment anywhere on the various Tyler Mills fake vlogs, MySpace and Facebook profiles and even company websites set up and you’ll receive a response. One YouTube viewer commented on the mediocre acting and was immediately hit up with a response asking, “Thanks. Which actor and how can they improve?” That’s service!

The show itself is well-shot and seethes with appropriate tension. Fans of interactive story-telling experiences like The Lost Experience, The Dark Knight promotion and Halo 2’s impressively vexing I Love Bees will find this a worthy addition to the genre. Interactive experiences like this are what the Internet was built for. (Also see newcomer ARG web series The Prisoner.) Maybe if the rewards for participation weren’t tantamount to stalking, more people will be excited by this curious puzzle.

Share
Published by
Sean Casey

Recent Posts

Explicit deepfakes are a monumental problem. Paris Hilton just published a TikTok series to combat them.

Paris Hilton has taken the fight against explicit deepfakes to TikTok. Her production company 11:11…

3 hours ago

Creators sit behind YouTube’s “Brand Deal Desk” to explain the secrets of their sponsorships

The creator economy is a $37 billion annual business, but that wealth is not split…

5 hours ago

After forging his own path, how far can Stephen Colbert go on YouTube and TikTok?

After hosting his final episode of CBS' long-running Late Show, Stephen Colbert made an unsurprising…

6 hours ago

YouTube is making AI labels easier to read (and applying them automatically)

At this point, AI-generated content on YouTube is a fait accompli. Like it or not,…

8 hours ago

Netflix enters a new frontier with real-time syndication of ‘The Breakfast Club’

For years, Netflix has wanted to make its name as the home of ultra-premium content.…

1 day ago

Top 5 Branded Videos of the Week: Movie moments

'Tis the season for festive holiday beverages, and some of YouTube's biggest channels are raising…

1 day ago