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Edward Snowden cast as hero in smartphone game

The NSA leaker wanted by U.S. authorities stars in the mobile game Snowden Run 3D. In the endless runner, players must collect "sensitive information" while avoiding the long arm of the law.

Alex Sundby
Alex Sundby is a senior news editor for CBSNews.com
Alex Sundby
2 min read

Edward Snowden is pursued by Agent Jake in the video game Snowden Run 3D.
Edward Snowden runs by green USB sticks while being pursued by Agent Jake in the video game Snowden Run 3D. MTS Freestyle

Now Edward Snowden can hunt for information on Americans' smartphones.

The National Security Agency leaker wanted by the U.S. government has been immortalized -- in a digital sense, anyway -- as the hero of a mobile game.

In Snowden Run 3D by MTS Freestyle, gamers play the former intelligence worker in three settings: NSA headquarters in Fort Meade, Md.; Hong Kong, where Snowden revealed himself as the source who leaked the intelligence agency's program collecting phone records on Americans; and the Moscow airport Snowden left Thursday after being granted temporary asylum in Russia.

Much like the real Snowden saga (for now at least), there is no end to the game, and it goes on infinitely.

"This is exactly what is happening to Snowden, he keeps on running," game author Michele Rocco Smeets told AP Television News. "Will he get caught? Well, this is not like he can just click 'again,' like in this video game, and restart from the beginning. If he truly is caught by the American government, then he is in great, big problems."

Edward Snowden maneuvers around Hong Kong in the video game "Snowden Run 3D."
MTS Freestyle

Players must collect USB sticks and laptops containing "sensitive information," all while avoiding the long arm of the law, which Smeets refers to as Agent Jake. Getting caught by Jake earns the player a one-way ticket to Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.

But, like Snowden, players can get help from the outside, represented in the game in the form of a cell phone call to "Uncle Putin," who will drop one Soviet-era hydrogen bomb to shake Jake off the trail for a while.

"All the obstacles are away, and you'll see special agents flying away and stuff like that," Smeets told the AP.

The game is available for free on Android smartphones, and an iPhone version is expected to be released soon, according to Smeets.

This story originally appeared on CBSNews.com.