Taken from Boortz.com:

Designed to spark dialogue and create awareness of unfair U.S. immigration policies, ICED! I Can End Deportation (a play on the Immigration and Customs Enforcement Department), is a free, 3D downloadable game (available at Breakthrough.tv | ICED). It teaches players about current immigration laws on detention and deportation that affect legal permanent residents, asylum seekers, students and undocumented people by violating human rights and denying due process. Game players can choose one of five characters to inhabit and live out the day-to-day life of an immigrant youth. The youths are being chased by immigration officers, while making moral decisions and answering myth and fact questions about current immigration policies. If the player chooses or answers incorrectly, he/she increases his/her chances of being thrown into detention. Once in detention, the player endures both physical separation from his/her family and unjust conditions while awaiting -- often for unknown amounts of time -- the random outcome of his/her case. The game was developed by Breakthrough, an international human rights organization.
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So now we have a video game called ICED, which here stands for "I can end deportation".

The game begins with having you pick a character. For example, a character named Javier. His background info states....

Javier, age 20...status...Undocumented...in the country illegally...awaiting DREAM act to pass..

Javier has lived in the U.S. since age 5. His English is stronger than his Spanish...



It also claims that he and his family lost their jobs to NAFTA and decided to stay in the U.S. even though their "guest-worker visas expired, which in turn made them undocumented/illegal. It continues to say that the goal of the game is to stay out of detention, and directs the player to civic duty points and quizzes to gain points, or you will go to detention.

Contemptible throughtout.