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For Programming Whiz Kid, Corruption Fight is a Game
Rizky Amelia | February 04, 2012

Fahma Waluya Rosmansyah, 14, showing off the antigraft game he developed on his iPad in Jakarta on Friday. (JG Photo/Jurnasyanto Sukarno) Fahma Waluya Rosmansyah, 14, showing off the antigraft game he developed on his iPad in Jakarta on Friday. (JG Photo/Jurnasyanto Sukarno)
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shytallnight
4:55pm Feb 4, 2012

Seems the fight against corruption has been a game for too long if you ask me.


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Onlookers couldn’t help but notice there was a teenager standing beside Corruption Eradication Commission chairman Abraham Samad as he announced a new suspect in the bribery scandal surrounding the construction of an athletes’ village for last year’s Southeast Asian Games.

That teenager was Fahma Waluya Rosmansyah, 14. The student from the Bandung 2 State Junior High School in West Java had come to the antigraft body, known as the KPK, to showcase an anti-corruption game application he had developed.

“I want to help the fight against corruption through a game,” Fahma said after a visit to the KPK office in South Jakarta on Friday. “The game is available for the iPad.”

Speaking in front of KPK chairman Abraham, Fahma said he had been inspired to develop the game after watching television news reports showing how the KPK arrests and questions corruption suspects.

“The name of the game is ‘Raid the Rats,’” he said. “I often see on the news where [corruption suspects] get out of the car, have their photographs taken [by reporters] and are investigated.”

For about a year, Fahma has been taking lessons at a programming school, Sekolah Komputer Cinta Indonesia, in his hometown of Bandung. He said he spent a month developing the game during his school holiday.

The main protagonist in the game is an “anti-corruption” robot that shoots tennis ball-like projectiles at rats sporting suits and ties and carrying large bags of cash printed with dollar signs.

The rats, he said, are meant to represent corruptors. Players tap their iPads to shoot the balls with the aim of vanquishing as many corruptors as possible.

Fahma also said that he wanted input from the KPK before launching the game on Apple’s Application Store for free.

“The game is not perfect yet. The KPK said they would give their opinion about the game soon,” he said.

He wants to add more difficulty levels to the game that feature more speed, obstacles or new menacing villains. At the moment, it is fairly easy to get the maximum score of 2,400 on the single level.

He is also considering adding a more dramatic death for the rats, which currently just disappear when a ball hits them.

In addition to educating his peers about the fight against corruption, Fahma said he wanted to promote angklung, a traditional bamboo instrument from West Java whose music is featured as background in the game.

“Angklung is our heritage and I want to preserve that in the game,” he said.

When asked about what he wanted to be when he grows up, he said there was only one thing comes to mind: being a professional game developer.

Additional reporting by Nivell Rayda