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Jan 14, 2013 | 08:13 AM
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Feds fund $100,000 video game featuring female climate change 'superhero'

January 10, 2013 | 11:13 am | Modified: January 10, 2013 at 11:15 am
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Photo - Star of the taxpayer-funded video game HERadventure. (From Inside Spelman)
Star of the taxpayer-funded video game HERadventure. (From Inside Spelman)

A new video game featuring a black alien female superhero delivered to Earth to fight global warming is about to hit the market thanks to a $100,000 grant from the Obama administration.

The National Endowment for the Arts is funding the Spelman College of Atlanta, Ga.'s multi-episode game called "HERadventure." In the grant announcement made last year, the NEA said the story "focuses on a young female superhero sent to Earth to save her own planet from devastation because of climate changes caused by social issues impacting women and girls."

The game is set to debut on March 8 on International Women's Day.

The college's digital newspaper described the project this way: "What would happen if the societal issues affecting women put other planets at risk? Well, of course, HER, a black female superhero, would swoop in with a plan to save the universe. HER is central to HERadventure, a science fiction-based, multimedia platform project that interweaves virtual worlds, digital and social media to create a gaming and storytelling experience. HERadventure not only entertains but tackles social issues that permeate the daily reality of many women."

While the grant was hit by a lawmaker when it was made, it just came to our attention when the watchdog site Speak With Authority called it wasteful.

"The description defies parody. $100,000 of taxpayer money is going to help develop a video game about a female alien sent to earth to rescue her own planet," said the site, which added: "Mark your calendars for March 8th. We paid $100,000 for it. We might as well see if we got our money's worth."

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