Journey to the End of the Night: An Interactive Street Game In Oakland by SF0

by Burstein! on June 9, 2009 · 3 comments

guest post by Burstein!

Journey to the End of the Nigh

Journey to the End of the Night is an interactive and free street game that is being produced by SF0. While the rules are a bit more complex, the game is an extended version of tag where the players will try to make it through a series of checkpoints while being chased by the organizers. If you get caught, you then become a chaser.

It starts Saturday, June 20th, 7pm in the amphitheater at Mosswood Park near the MacArthur Bart.

Here Are A Few Related Posts You Might Enjoy:

Journey to the End of the Night: Halloween San Francisco 2009

Oakland Crimespotting, An Interactive Map of Crimes

KICK! The SXSW Interactive 2008 Kickball Game

San Francisco’s Lombard Street To Be Converted Into Giant Version of the Game Candyland

D&D Game on Market Street in San Francisco

filed under Events

{ 3 comments… read them below or add one }

1 Vinnie June 9, 2009 at 4:08 pm

East O already has a game like that.
Kinda like tag but more brutal..
My family & Crew have been participants for the last half century.
It’s much more “Hands on” though.
And sometimes the participants like myself are unwilling but have no choice.

hee hee

Reply

2 John G June 9, 2009 at 10:44 pm

I used to be an SF0 competitor (of sorts) and the tales of past “Journey to the End of the Night” competitions are pretty intense.

Reply

3 Q June 10, 2009 at 1:55 pm

Vinnie: Thankfully the organizers have pledged to choose checkpoints that create a minimum risk of attracting “community chasers”.

Reply

Leave a Comment

You can use these HTML tags and attributes: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>

Moderation: All comments are manually approved, so if your comment is approved it may take a while for your comment to appear on this blog post.

Irrelevant, obnoxious, trolling, abusive and spam comments will not be approved. Let's keep things civil and on topic. Basically what we are saying, if your comment does not add to the conversation, it will not be approved.

Real Name & Website: For the most part do not post anonymous comments. Please list your real name and provide a link to your website, blog, Twitter account, etc. You know who we are, so we ask the same of you.

Corrections: If you want to point out a typo or correction, please email us instead. Typo or correction comments will not be approved since they are pretty much useless once they are corrected and then only tend to confuse things.

Gravatars: If you would like a Gravatar to show up with your comment? Just sign-up for an account and any comment with your email address will display your Gravatar.

Previous post: Frank Zappa Plays The Bicycle on a 1965 Episode of The Steve Allen Show

Next post: Weddings of the Times & Obama’s Blackberry, Two New Books by Kasper Hauser