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Virtual reality puts the climate’s future in the hands of gamers

It’s 2040 in Miami, and a powerful hurricane has swamped the low-lying city. You stand alone under a dark, foreboding sky, chest-high waves sloshing around you. An abandoned car floats nearby, one of the few objects visible in the expanse of water.

A ball-shaped robot then hovers into view, urging you to grab a computer hard drive from the car. Once you insert the drive into the robot, you’re whisked out of the harrowing scenario and back to safety.

The scene is from an immersive virtual reality game developed for the Adrienne Arsht-Rockefeller Foundation Resilience Center as part of growing efforts to give policymakers a visceral sense of what their decisions on climate change today could mean in the future, for good or bad.

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