We. The Refugees: Ticket to Europe 成就
应用程序 ID | 2094580 |
应用程序类型 | GAME |
开发人员 | Act Zero |
出版商 | Polyslash |
类别 | 单人游戏 |
流派 | 休闲, 独立, 角色扮演, 冒险 |
发行日期 | 1 五月, 2023 |
平台 | Windows |
支持的语言 | English, Polish |
We. The Refugees: Ticket to Europe Steam 成就
We. The Refugees: Ticket to Europe 为玩家提供了丰富的挑战,总共有 100 个可解锁成就。这些成就涵盖了各种游戏内活动,鼓励探索、技能发展和战略掌控。解锁这些成就不仅能带来奖励,还能加深玩家对游戏内容的互动。

I wrote down my first impressions as soon as my plane landed in Egypt.

U.S. pop-culture is omnipresent. My taxi driver idolized fiscally irresponsible American rappers.

American imperialism has done so much harm to this continent. That painful fact did not stop the expansion of U.S. pop-culture. Why?

Alexandria is a city of concrete. I can only imagine how hot it gets in the summer.


Sure, all wars are complicated. But I can’t even begin to fathom the nuances of the conflict in Syria.

I remember the casual tone with which the smoking Syrians spoke about war.

This delicious note on the diversity of Egyptian cuisine makes my mouth water.

After several hours of physical work at the Home of Hope, I had an existential epiphany.

The Egyptian beach prompted a few thoughts.

I mean, I had known about Egypt’s radical anti-alcohol policy before I got there, but it still felt weird.

A few mouth-watering paragraphs about the gastronomic sensations offered by the chef in my hotel’s conjure the taste of the dish.

I made some notes as Erik lectured me on the history of humanitarianism. Aren’t they too academic?

I would like to believe that all NGO employees are idealists. But every herd harbors some black sheep.


I felt surprisingly at ease at the Home of Hope, and wrote a few words about it.


The Dunant–Nightingale dilemma summarizes the debate on the moral quandaries of humanitarianism.

I would highly recommend this local dish from a street stall. I would not recommend the shits that followed.



I didn’t expect to find real works of art in the stairwell of a dilapidated block in the suburbs. I was wrong.

Anywhere you go in this world, you’ll find an identical shopping mall.

The several hours I spent motionless, sitting for a portrait, were surprisingly emotional.

It felt really awkward to pose as an expert after just a couple of days spent in Alexandria. Is that all it takes?

Taking these drugs was a philosophical expedition in its own right. I’m still wondering about the idea of free will.

Marko’s story is tragic. And one of thousands.

How could I get arrested? At least it gave me the opportunity to write about Egypt’s prison system.




A crime syndicate operates just like any big business. The difference is the mafia can’t be bothered to pretend.

This one word contains so many meanings: refugees.

I had plenty of time for writing detailed descriptions of the refugees’ routines on board the smuggling trawler.


I summarized Wahid’s story in a few paragraphs.



I learnt about the realities of living in Saddam Hussein’s Iraq.


The casual conversation with Kassim gave me a temporary reprieve. It felt like I was back in college.




Had I not obtained this vest through deception, I would not have saved the drowning mother. Can vile deeds have virtuous consequences?

When I got a panic attack during the storm, I felt... possessed.

The inevitability of death struck me with great force during the storm.

This Zambian visionary dreamed of flying to the Moon.

The story of Zambian Afronauts sounds implausible. Is it true?

Mona showed me a photograph from her childhood and told me all about it.

Mona’s childhood memory remains a vivid symbol of her dashed hopes.


The refugees imagined Europe in a naively idealized fashion.

The sea seems eternal and unchanging. Time gets dissolved in the inky waters.

Battuta relayed a vision of a friendly relationship between man and God.


Dinah told me about a local custom of same-sex marriage. It sounded progressive.

Dinah lost her hand after she was bitten by a venomous viper.

Dinah and her daughter went through some ups and downs with aid organizations.

People’s relationships with their fathers are often fraught. But Dinah’s father gave her hell.

After several weeks spent with the refugees, I’ve formed a bond with them. I feel part of something greater. It’s a new feeling.

I’ve spent a few weeks among the refugees and I still feel like an outsider. Do I need more time? Or is it not a matter of time?

This independence movement operated in Western Sahara for several decades.

Most people were running from the Islamic State, and she was headed right for the heart of darkness...

Anna called jihadis hypocrites. They fight against Western culture, yet wallow in lavish consumerism.

The Islamic States quite deliberately uses various propaganda techniques.




Francesco laid out some solid arguments against welcoming refugees.

Francesco’s inconvenient questions still ring in my ears. He forced me to look at the refugees from a different perspective.

I stayed at the Moria refugee camp in the Greek island of Lesbos and described my experience.

The ocean of tents in Moria… You have to see it to even grasp its scale.

Colin shared his dilemma: “Does socially engaged art make the artist disengaged?”

This world demands beauty. Even – or especially – from images of suffering.


This photo makes the hairs at the back of my neck stand up. The tall heap of life-vests epitomizes the refugee crisis.

Do people simply get hooked on helping? How addictive is it?

You can’t see any borders if you look at Europe from a great enough distance.

Who were these day-drinking, chest-bumping, obnoxious passengers?

Planes and airports are a little magical. Like portals leading to foreign worlds.




The methods to calculate smugglers’ rates in Africa deserve a scientific paper. Or maybe a whole dissertation.

The desert didn’t seem to end. I was slowly starting to believe there was no world beyond it.

I’d never seen this many stars.

In the smuggler’s hideout, the refugees developed new rituals.

Boredom can be deadly. Why is it so rarely mentioned in the context of the refugees’ plight?


The refugees viewed the Arab Spring from many different perspectives.


People were saying their goodbyes to loved ones before we set sail. Was this the last time they ever talked?

I feel so lost. I don’t understand so many contexts, words and terms. Will this ever change?


That was incredible. I’d never thought I would get the opportunity to just have some light-hearted conversations with refugees.

Wahid told me about the personal odyssey that led him to this boat. He’s traveled thousands of kilometers.


Sometimes, the greatest epiphanies come to you in the most mundane situations. Ordinary life with the refugees has taught me the most about them.
