Read the Article and you should be able to download the game. Also add comments at the bottom of the Article. Have Fun.

"A human rights organization today unveiled a new video game called ``ICED!,'' which stands for ``I Can End Deportation."
The game is free for download at www.icedgame.com.

The creators of ICED! said it is ``designed to spark dialogue and create awareness of unfair U.S. immigration policies.''

In the videogame, players can choose from five characters -- including an undocumented immigrant and lawful permanent resident. The ultimate goal is to become a U.S. citizen. The players make moral choices, like whether to hop a subway turnstile or shoplift. The characters are pursued by immigration officials, who try to detain and deport them. Players earn points to help avoid deportation by doing positive things.

The game was created by Breakthrough, a New York-based human rights organization, along with community organizations and high school teachers and students.

UPDATE FROM MIZANUR RAHMAN:

I got an advance peek at ICED! and tested my immigration knowledge.

For game play, I picked the character Javier, a 20-year-old who migrated to the U.S. from Mexico with his family on visitor visas. He works as delivery boy in New York City and wants to become a teacher. But his family overstayed their visas and now can be deported. He's waiting for passage of the DREAM Act (the law that would put undocumented student immigrants on the path to legalization).

I quickly earned a pot of points, for planting trees, recycling a soda can, giving money to the homeless and volunteering in a soup kitchen. But then I faced a dilemma: I came across someone on a street corner registering people to vote. Should I register? The game warns me that if I register I increase my chances of being deported. It also tells you there are millions of immigrants in the country who are legal and pay taxes but cannot vote. I play it safe and walk away.

Then I stumble upon someone selling counterfeit DVDs. Should I buy? The game tells me that any association with illegal activities could draw ICE's attention. I pass on the DVDs.

Temptation strikes again: a car with the key in the ignition. Should I steal the car? That was easy. No way.

My play was going smoothly until ... I got busted by immigration agents for something in my past. I apparently had a baby when I was underage with my 16-year-old girlfriend. Technically, I broke the law. My family was split up, and I was hauled off to a detention center in Louisiana.

I could be there for five months or five years. It's uncertain. And I have no access to a free lawyer. I stopped playing before the next phase of the game -- navigating the world of immigration detention.

ICED! hopes to teach people the facts and myths surrounding immigration. It succeeds at illustrating how quickly and unexpectedly an undocumented immigrant's life can unravel. But immigration is an incredibly complex and nuanced issue -- one that is difficult to simplify into a video game. (For instance, as far as I could tell, the game makes no mention of how to address the thousands of immigrants who commit serious crimes.)

But the value of the game rests in its simple premise of walking in an immigrant's shoes and experiencing their world."

http://blogs.chron.com/immigration/arch ... _teac.html