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Video Game Shows a World Without Resources

Recharge, a video game created by rock group Linkin Park and Kuuluu Interactive Entertainment, aims to teach players about the dangers of a world without natural resources and the importance of sustainable energy.
The game is set in the "not-too-distant future," according to its website. It's a world where humans battle machines for what few natural resources remain, and fight to "recharge" the globe with renewable energy.
SEE ALSO: How to Follow Social Good Summit Online 
Linkin Park dove into the clean energy movement in 2005 when they founded Music For Relief, a charity that provides help to people affected by natural disasters and supports clean energy projects. That charity's main movement currently is Power the World, a project it says is dedicated to raising awareness about the 1.3 billion people worldwide who live without electricity.
Dave Farrell, Linkin Park's bassist, hopes to address that problem by engaging his band's over 56 million Facebook fans.
"We're big believers in powers in numbers," Farrell said on stage at the Social Good Summit while talking to Mashable CEO Pete Cashmore. Farrell says Linkin Park's fans want to be active and aware of what's happening in the world around them, and so the band wanted to think of a way to direct that energy toward something positive.
"What better way than gaming?" Farrell said. "We grew up playing video games, and those games had all different types of messages."
He hopes that people who download the game on Facebook will team up and fight the resource-hoarding machines together, which is similar to how he hopes the game's message will spread. By playing something whose message is that the world needs clean energy to survive, he hopes awareness will spread and people will act.
"I say it all the time, the easiest thing that people can do — it doesn't take money, it doesn't take anything like that — is to be aware of what's going on, find out the information, and share it with your friends," Farrell said.
Will you play Recharge? Let us know in the comments.

The Social Good Summit is where big ideas meet new media to create innovative solutions and is brought to you by Mashable, The 92nd Street Y, The United Nations Foundation, The United Nations Development Programme, The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation and Ericsson. Held during U.N. Week, the Social Good Summit unites a dynamic community of global leaders to discuss a big idea: the power of innovative thinking and technology to solve our greatest challenges.
Date: Sept. 22 through Sept. 24 Time: 12 to 6 p.m. each day Location: 92nd Street Y, 1395 Lexington Ave., New York, N.Y. Tickets are sold-out, but tune into the Livestream.
 
BONUS: 10 Empowering Apps for Social Good
Gone are the days of daring your friends without consequences. When you challenge your friends to Budge, the person who loses the challenge needs to donate an agreed upon amount to a charity of the winner's choosing.
Available on iOS.
Charity Miles lets you raise money for your favorite causes while walking, running or biking. The app's corporate sponsors donate 25 cents for each mile you walk or run, and 10 cents for each mile you bike.
Charity Miles is available for iOS and Android.
With every photo you share, Johnson & Johnson donates $1 to a cause of your choosing. The Donate a Photo app, available on iOS and Android, also lets you follow your friends' photos, so you can keep up with your social life.
Great for foodies, photographers and humanitarians, this iOS app adds a great cause to your foodstagrams. When you dine and snap a food shot at one of the participating restaurants -- which, for now, are only in New York -- a meal is donated to a non-profit feeding schoolchildren in South Africa.
In this free iOS game, you'll travel with Maya, an Indian girl, as she navigates the slums in search of clean water. The longer it takes her to find water, the more school she misses.
The game was created in partnership with charity: water, which lends in-game missions and video scenes to the app.
Did you know that with the money you save cooking three of your own meals, you could fund someone's HIV medicine for three months? Instead is an iOS app that shows you how much you can save with simple tweaks in your lifestyle. Once you make those cheaper decisions, Instead encourages you to donate to a non-profit out of your savings.
My Life as a Refugee is an app for iOS and Android created by the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR). It lets anyone around the world experience life fleeing from conflict or persecution. Through beautiful illustrations, you'll read the stories of the app's many characters, who have been separated from their loved ones and have experienced hardships.
The Recyclebank app, available for iOS and Android, rewards you for recycling. The gamification of recycling awards points that you can redeem in stores and in the app.
Forget daily deal apps -- there are apps that give back while giving you a great deal. TangoTab, available for iOS and Android, donates meals to food banks every time a diner purchases one of its restaurant deals.
Eager for a new volunteer program? This iOS app brings the online volunteer network onto your smartphone. It has a sleek interface that will help you find great opportunities to give back near you.
VolunteerMatch lets you select which skill you're looking to use to volunteer, so you can lend your expert web design or managerial skills, for example.
Image: Mashable, Casey Kelbaugh
 

সোর্স: http://mashable.com/

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