There’s a bright side to being stuck at home. The global lockdowns spurred by the COVID-19 pandemic have given many people the rare opportunity to finish their personal projects. 

For a game developer with zero programming experience in the Philippines, it was a videogame about the Vietnam War which took almost 20 years to complete. 

The ‘Nam: Vitetnam Combat Operations Intro

“I was always interested in history and the Vietnam War in particular,” says game developer Tiger Yan. “I started creating The ‘Nam: Vietnam Combat Operations way back in 2003 but work and life were more important, so the project was mothballed for 17 years. Like everyone else, the COVID-19 outbreak forced me to stay home most of 2020. I saw this as the perfect opportunity to learn basic programming and finally finish what I started.”

The ‘Nam: Vitetnam Combat Operations Gameplay (Blood Trails)

Yan, who photographs people and animals in wild and rural areas around Asia, created the game as a free learning tool for people to experience commanding soldiers during the Vietnam War. He used his field experience investigating farm communities and wild areas to make the game as realistic as possible. “From irrigation dikes and rice paddies to barking dogs and crowing chickens, this game brings the Vietnamese countryside to life,” he says.  

Filipino Uses COVID-19 Lockdown to Create Game About Vietnam War
Many of the game’s graphics were drawn by hand using antiquated programs such as MS paint, still popularly used when Command and Conquer Tiberian Sun was launched in 2003. The ‘Nam uses Tiberian Sun’s 20-plus year old game engine and logic systems.

According to the game’s Facebook page, players can command US Marines, Vietcong and North Vietnamese Army troops, plus the Army of the Republic of Vietnam (ARVN). The Vietnam War ended in 1975 when the North Vietnamese and Vietcong unified Vietnam under communist rule. The game has been receiving consistently good reviews in fora and Youtube channels. Though it can be downloaded online for free, Yan urges gamers to make a donation to APOPO, a nonprofit organization working to clear deadly landmines in Cambodia.

Filipino Uses COVID-19 Lockdown to Create Game About Vietnam War
Screenshot from the game intro, one of numerous videos about the game on Youtube. The game has been downloaded over 1000 times in under a month and is available for free.

“In reality, the Vietnam War wrought great misery for the people of Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia. If this game can spur at least one good donation, then it would have been worth it,” adds Yan. 

Though COVID-19 has paralyzed the world, people can look at the silver lining. The lockdowns have finally given many people a resource which for years has been in short supply – time.“The ‘Nam: Vietnam Combat Operations” is currently available for PCs and laptops. You can play the game for free by visiting their official Facebook page at facebook.com/NamCombatOperations.

Filipino Uses COVID-19 Lockdown to Create Game About Vietnam War
A heavily-armed US Marine convoy barrels down a dusty Vietnamese road as dozens of hidden Vietcong soldiers in ambush.

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