• Vice: Meet the Polish LARPers Who Pretend to Be American

    From kyonshi@gmkeros@gmail.com to rec.games.frp.live-action,rec.games.frp.misc on Fri Jan 20 10:51:09 2023
    From Newsgroup: rec.games.frp.misc

    https://www.vice.com/en/article/g5vpbx/poland-larp-america-ohio

    Meet the Polish LARPers Who Pretend to Be American
    Roleplaying as people celebrating the 4th of July in Ohio is a unique
    take on LARP, to say the least.

    by Nina Zabicka
    June 16, 2022, 10:00am

    By day, Bartosz Bruski works in computer forensics, but in his down
    time, the 29-year-old unwinds by heading to a trailer park outside
    Warsaw, where he directs a group of around 60 Polish people who pretend
    to be ordinary Americans rCo people from Ohio, to be exact.

    You might think LARPing (short for live action role play) basically
    means a bunch of people dressed in medieval outfits, recreating
    historical battles. Instead, Bartek and his fellow LARP enthusiasts turn
    a peaceful holiday resort in a Polish forest into an American trailer
    park, with dozens of participants who stay in character with their
    assigned family, living at their assigned trailer home for 28 hours at a
    time.

    When BruskirCOs 4th of July LARP crew went viral at the end of May, the internet rCo mainly Americans rCo were baffled to see a reenactment of something so mundane. rCLThis is disinformation. OP literally just googled images of actual Ohioans, posted them, and made up a story of Polish LARPers,rCY one impressed fan tweeted. rCLAs an Ohio-born guy myself? Not bad,rCY another said. rCLExtra points for the Browns jersey.rCY

    VICE met Bartek at a Warsaw bistro to find out more about what exactly
    LARPing as an American involves. This interview was conducted in Polish
    and translated into English.

    VICE: LetrCOs begin with the basics. How would you explain what LARP is to someone whorCOs never heard of it?
    Bartosz Bruski: ItrCOs a role-playing game in which the participants take
    on the role of a character within a closed imaginary world. During the
    course of the game, under rules that they agree upon in advance, they
    tell a story together.

    Why did you decide to do a LARP based in Ohio?
    It started about five years ago, together with a bunch of friends. We
    decided to do a LARP. Inspired by Stranger Things and X-Files rCo we
    wanted to recreate a small town in the United States where strange
    things happen and because of that, men in black arrive. We visited
    various resorts in Poland, looking for one that would perfectly reflect
    the small town on the edge of the great gloomy forest.

    We found a resort in +U||d+| province, near [the city of] Tomasz||w Mazowiecki. One of us rCo I don't remember anymore to whom this glory
    falls rCo said it wasn't the place we were looking for, but if we
    redesigned it a bit it would look like an American trailer park. At the
    next project meeting we didn't talk about Stranger Things and X-Files,
    but we talked about American trailer parks. That's how it started.

    How did you do the research?
    When it comes to production, that is the look of the game, the costumes
    and the scenery, we worked mainly on the Internet and how we imagined
    the scene when we type rCL4th of JulyrCY into Google. But apart from nice fireworks and costumes, it also has a 700 page plot for characters and
    the whole scenario. This is where we have often worked with sources
    like, Hillbilly Elegy, Nomadland, and Three Billboards [Outside Ebbing, Missouri]. And from books rCo for example, I read These Truths: A History
    of the United States, a great book which gives a different perspective
    on this country.

    We grew up with a vision of the States as if itrCOs the land of milk and honeyrCa Then when you grow up and information is shared more, it turns
    out that it's not so nice in the States. We came up with [the idea of
    this] rCLbroken American dreamrCY, and this was the motif for the project.
    So whorCOs actually part of your crew?
    Six of us have put a lot of work into this game rCo that is me, Pawel and
    Ewa, who were most responsible for design; Kuba and Ania who dealt with production aspects, mainly production of scenery and props; and Meg, who worked on making this place a gastronomic and social centre of life. We
    also have a whole team of scriptwriters and a few people who wrote for
    us different characters because we created over 700 pages of script.

    We come to the game location beforehand to set it all up and turn the
    resort into our trailer park. During the game [about a dozen people] are responsible for technical issues, moving, preparing the scenery, events, props, setting off fireworks, erecting the tables; [all] playing various
    roles of supporting characters. ItrCOs really the work of a whole staff of people. I can safely say that it reached about 200 participants [across
    all LARPing events], but with the work of several dozen people who have
    been in this project from the very beginning for almost five years.
    Have you seen the reaction from Americans on the internet?
    It's funny because the biggest storm [online] broke out the day before
    we started preparing for the third round. We were already very involved
    in the production of the next game and setting up the scenery, so we
    didn't have much time to write back to people or manage what was
    happening on the Internet. But that just gave us the energy to produce
    the next project.
    What comments stuck with you?
    Americans very often pay attention to the same thingsrCa They keep saying
    that there arenrCOt enough old cars, not enough trash, that the BBQs are
    too small, and that the people are too clean, too slim and too pretty rCo their words, not mine. They also draw attention to the lack of racial diversity. There were also a few people who wanted to send us parcels
    from the States, such as the legendary red cups, to make it even more faithful.

    It's cool that people are interested in it. People very often guess what
    is in the pictures... For example, they see a character who looks like a
    sort of itinerant preacher in the middle of a sermon. That was easy. But there's a picture where there's a guy in some sort of American shirt and
    dark glasses and they write that it's a detective on the trail of a drug trafficking gang that runs trailers like in Breaking Bad. Let's just say
    they weren't far from the truth.
    So you include more problematic aspects of life in America, like cooking
    meth [as Breaking Bad does]?
    Yes, we have both universal themes, like poverty and unemployment, as
    well as themes that are very specific to the US rCo like the horrendous
    cost of health insurance or the problems caused by universal access to weapons. So our game also deals with crime and we have a drug creation
    motif like in Breaking Bad.

    How do Polish people react to LARPing?
    They very often associate it with fantasy games in various fantasy
    worlds where people dress up as fantasy characters and play in a field somewhere. It's a branch of our hobby that's very easy to trivialise or
    turn into a joke about dressed up people who run around in the woods.

    I can compare it to cinema, itrCOs a very universal medium rCo there may not be one film for everyone but there is a film for everyone. I think the
    same could be said about LARPs rCo it's a very universal hobby. There is
    no LARP for everyone, but there is a LARP for everyone, regardless of
    cultural baggage, age or other conditions. We all LARP when we are
    children, pretending to be policemen, thieves or playing house rCo it's
    just that we grow out of it and we don't nurture that desire to
    role-play as adults.
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