New game revives Singapore’s forgotten tales


Cool game: View of the skyline in Singapore. The WhatsApp game game, Hidden.sg, has generally received positive reviews from users, who find it both informative and entertainingly immersive. — Reuters

SINGAPORE: After spending 14 years in the United Kingdom, Singaporean Lim Yee Hung returns home to find out he had forgotten much about his home country.

Diving into the National Archives to school himself, he became captivated by all the stories that lay hidden away.

Rather than let them remain dormant, Lim, 37, decided to transform them into a self-guided outdoor game named Hidden.sg.

Hidden.sg uses simple WhatsApp messages and an artificial intelligence chatbot to help Singaporeans and tourists find hidden gems in the city’s many neighbourhoods including Tiong Bahru, Dakota and Toa Payoh.

Among the tales players might learn is that Dakota estate was named for the Douglas DC-3 aircraft, fondly dubbed “the Dakota” by the British.

This plane was once a common sight at the now-defunct Kallang Airport nearby.

Another intriguing stop might lead players to a modest three-room Housing Board flat in Toa Payoh, to which the late Queen Elizabeth II paid a visit in 1972.

Lim, a co-founder of Move Technologies, the company behind the game, said Hidden.sg aims to support local businesses by featuring them in the game.

“We don’t charge them a dime to be featured. In fact, we pay them, and in some cases we become their biggest customer because we bulk-buy their products to give to our players during the game,” said Lim, who was in property development in the United Kingdom.

Lee Fund, director of Tea Chapter, a traditional Chinese tea house that has been in Tanjong Pagar since 1989, praised the game for boosting his tea house’s visibility and patronage.

On a good day, Lee said, he gets 30 redemptions for tea bags and tea eggs from players.

A standard game is priced at S$25 a person and requires at least two participants. Each game includes surprise gifts.

Launched in May 2022, Hidden.sg has since attracted more than 15,000 participants, said Lim.

Revenue for the game comes from ticket sales to the public and to companies who use it as a team-building activity.

The game has generally received positive reviews from users, who find it both informative and entertainingly immersive.

One player wrote on Tripadvisor: “Played my fourth game from Hidden.sg today.

“The game is great whether you’re a tourist in Singapore for the first time or you’re a local looking to rediscover the area.”

“I was surprised by cool facts I never knew and hidden gems I never knew existed. I got to interact with local businesses, occasionally with complimentary gifts too. Best of all, the game can be played at your own pace and even with kids.”

To date, the game covers 10 locations, including Holland Village, Toa Payoh, Chinatown and Tanjong Pagar. Some of the game locations, like Seletar Aerospace, which was built in partnership with JTC Corp, and the Land Transport Authority’s Tiong Bahru/Redhill trail, are free to play.

One-North, Bras Basah and Marina Central Business Improvement District are game locations in the pipeline, said Lim.

He added that there are plans to expand the Hidden.sg concept overseas.

“It’s part of the company’s plan for internationalisation, so Hidden London or Hidden Perth could be next,” he said. — The Straits Times/ANN

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