Oregon Trail Live, the
real-world competition based on the Oregon Trail PC game, kicked off with the startling crack of a bullwhip in Salem, Oregon this past Saturday, sending âwagon trainsâ âwestwardâ from âIndependence, Mo.â (a.k.a. the check-in area) to complete ten OT-derived challenges en route to Oregonâs Willamette Valley (a.k.a. where we were all actually playing).
Trailblazersâthose of us playing the gameâhad been encouraged to make up backstories for their emigrant personas. On the drive from Portland my team decided to embody a colorful crew of outsiders. Thereâs âRippin'â Rachel, a prostitute headed west for the lower-competition lonely-frontiersman market; âRootinâ Tootin'â Rebecca, a jilted wife seeking revenge on her runaway husband; and yours truly, Johnny âCyanideâ Appleseed, a drifter with a shady past. Together, weâre Team on the Runâmotto: âOregon or Busted.â
Once weâve constructed our symbolic miniature wagon, we hit the trail. Our first challenge has to do with the scourge of
The Oregon Trail: itâs the three-legged dysentery race, an out-and-back sprint to the outhouse. A lady pioneer hikes up her skirt to prevent tripping and asks the judge if sheâll allow it. She will: âWhen youâve got dysentery, anything goes.â
Team on the Run loses badly, but a bribe of seasonal produce gets us a gold star anyway. Briberyânot part of the computer game, true, but maybe it should be? Cc:
MECCâis condoned and then some by the event organizers, and turns out to be pretty much the name of the game.
While caulking (Saran-wrapping) our wagon at the Platte River crossing (a gauntlet of kiddie pools), we run into competition creator Kelly Williams Brown. Itâs hot, and the redhead is reddening even under her broad hat. The real Oregon Trail sounds like too much work, she tells me. âI hate walking for more than, like, a block-and-a-half. I would have just stayed an Irish peasant forever.â
Down the trail, we have to bury our âill-fated team member,â a paper doll we called Billy. (Cause of death: knowing too much about my characterâs shady past.) Growing up, maybe my favorite part of
The Oregon Trail was naming my characters after my brothers and laughing my head off when they died of a snakebite or what-have-you. Looking around the grounds of the Willamette Heritage Center, where the eventâs being held, I see surprisingly few nostalgic twentysomethings and surprisingly many families with kids. Nice to know the gameâs become multigenerational, I suppose, but I shudder to think what newfangled, over-complicated version of OT they must be familiar with.
At last we reach the Willamette Valley, where we have to pass a homesteadersâ exam based on historical trivia posted around the grounds. As with
The Oregon Trail, weâve incidentally learned some stuff via playing: did you know, for example, that wagons formed circles not to protect against Indians, but to corral animals? Fun fact learned elsewhere: at least 20,000 people died along the real trail. Dark subject matter for a childrenâs game, when you think about itâŠ
Awards are presented in Miss Millyâs Saloon, Gambling Parlor, Dance Hall and Arm Wrestling Emporium, where the sarsaparilla flows as freely as the Willamette. Prizes in the form of decorated cowbells go to the team with the best original dirge for their ill-fated team member, the team with the most attractive homestead, and the team that faced the most hardship (read: lost).
Thanks to several âgiftsâ to judges, Team on the Run ties with another group for top honors, but ultimately loses the coveted Golden Cowbell in a one-sided arm-wrestling match. Thatâs OK: headed home across the totally migration-worthy Willamette Valley, having spent the day paying tribute to this iconic, enduring game, it hardly feels like a loss.
Jonathan Frochtzwajg is a freelance journalist who has reached the Willamette Valley. Itâs rainy here. jfrochtzwajg.com // @jfrochtzwajg.