Walmart made a game that lets you see what it's like to work at one of their stores - here's how to play

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Walmart made a game that lets you see what it's like to work at one of their stores - here's how to play

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Walmart

Reuters

If you have ever, for whatever reason, wondered what it'd be like to work at Walmart - well, now's your chance.

The retail giant has released a game for your smartphone that lets you live a day in the life of a Walmart manager. Over the course of your workday, you monitor inventory, stock shelves, adjust prices, and perform tasks to the satisfaction of your boss and customers alike.

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The app, which Buzzfeed News first spotted, started out as a training tool for employees, Walmart spokesperson Michelle Malashock told Business Insider. The game, which is called Spark City, was piloted in a dozen Walmart stores over the summer before it was made public in Apple and Android app stores at the start of October. As of Oct. 16, the free app had around 60,000 downloads, Malashock says.

If you've ever played a Diner Dash-type simulation game (Sally's Spa, Cake Mania, Jane's Hotel to name a few), Walmart's Spark City works pretty similarly. I played through a (virtual) week of the game, which took about an hour.

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I present to you, the exciting life of a Walmart retail worker in Spark City:

walmart spark city game

Walmart

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Congrats, you work in Walmart's dry grocery department! Say hello to your boss Cynthia, who will be looking over your shoulder the entire game.

Congrats, you work in Walmart's dry grocery department! Say hello to your boss Cynthia, who will be looking over your shoulder the entire game.

Like any good boss, Cynthia will be there throughout your workday to provide feedback and criticism. She also introduces you to a bunch of complicated acronyms about customer satisfaction, sales and shelf stocks, which are used to measure your success and guide you through your tasks.

I forgot what Cynthia told me almost as soon as I started to play. You can pick up on the general idea of the terms as you play, although I can't guarantee you'll ever fully understand what's being measured and how you're evaluated.

You're provided with this handy (and useless) floor plan that shows the layout of the store.

You're provided with this handy (and useless) floor plan that shows the layout of the store.

You use the map, which sits in the corner of your screen, to switch between the places you need to perform tasks. You start each day in the back room, where you have to complete all your work before you can move into your assigned department.

I played through five workdays in the game, and in that time, the only locations that I needed to toggle between were the back room and the grocery section — so the floor plan seems kind of unnecessary. Walmart's spokesperson says that developers are in the process of adding a new level to the game that would take place in the "lawn and garden" section of the store.

If they really want to put the floor plan to good use though, Walmart's developers should consider adding a "Battle Royale" mode.

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Once in a while there's an emergency, and you have to fend for yourself to figure out what to do. I didn't pick the right choice when there was a spill on the floor, and a customer fell in it.

I apparently chose wrong by deciding to clean up the spill myself. While my character was walking to get the cleaning supplies, the game actually shows a customer fall in the puddle. It's all good, I talked to the guy and still kept my job.

During my work week, the only emergency alerts I got were spills I had to clean up and, once, a potential shoplifter I had to monitor.

You get a report card at the end of each day telling you had you did.

You get a report card at the end of each day telling you had you did.

I'm not going to lie, I got some joy seeing what I accomplished in the game. My progress report was generally better each day, so I'll take that as a sign that I could hold my own as a Walmart manager.

The game as it stands is pretty simple. Walmart says that it'll be adding new levels and features as soon as next month, because the app is still primarily a tool for training its employees.

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