
I'd Hide You is a game of stealth, cunning and adventure online and on the streets.
Explore a wood to find recordings about missing person Seamus Ruddy who disappeared in 1985. A collaboration with electronic musician Clark.
A voice leads you through the city and into an interactive heist movie where you play the lead.
Take on the character of Ulrike Meinhof (Red Army Faction) or Eamon Collins (IRA supergrass) as you walk the streets of the city.
You Get Me is a commissioned work for the Royal Opera House in London as part of the Deloitte Ignite Festival 2008.
Flypad is a site specific work for the Public Gallery in West Bromwich, using augmented reality to create a thrilling, collaborative experience.
Cyclists explore the city at night recording answers to questions and listening to the answers of others, prompted by a computer on their handlebars.
The game unfolds over a total of 24 days, each day representing an hour in the life of the town that shifts from the mundane to the cataclysmic.
Uncle roy all around you is where espionage movies become interactive; where the console game breaks onto the streets.
Tracked by satellites, Blast Theory's runners appear online next to your player on a map of the centre.
It is a game, an installation and a performance placing particpants in a collaborative virtual environment...
Toured throughout the UK and in Europe during 1999, the performance used a narrative as a way of looking at ideas of the future.
In 1998 Blast Theory launched a lottery in which the winners had the chance to be kidnapped.
On a stage 12m wide and 2m deep stands a bulky middle aged man in a New York cop's uniform.
Invisible Bullets is an installation / performance looking at the obsession with crime reconstructions.
At what point are you prepared to declare yourself publicly? What would make you take to the streets?