Sierra Leone Uses Board Game as Part of Driver's License Test

Authored by newsfeed.time.com and submitted by malalatargaryen
image for Sierra Leone Uses Board Game as Part of Driver's License Test

This way you don't have to read any manuals!

In the good old days, all you had to do to get a driver’s license was, you know, prove that you could drive. But now, at least in Sierra Leone, you have to play a board game before you can even take the licensing test.

The game is called “The Drivers’ Way” and requires players to roll stoplight-themed dice and move models of classic cars around a board, Reuters reports. They must also answer questions about the country’s road laws, traffic signs and so on.

The game costs 60,000 Leones, or about $14. Wannabe-drivers have to pay for it themselves, and then play it at least once before they can come in for their test.

“Most crashes here are a result of ignorance of the highway code,” the game’s creator, Morie Lenghor, told Reuters. “And most drivers don’t even understand half the road signs.”

She added that since most young people hate reading, she thought she’d try putting the important traffic laws into a format more “attractive” to them. Why not just Snapchat them driving rules then?

MORE: Texting While Driving? There’s an App for That. And a $400 Cell Phone Vault.

StuffMyCrust69 on October 25th, 2020 at 22:19 UTC »

Same here in the US but it’s GTA V

AdvancedAdvance on October 25th, 2020 at 21:39 UTC »

Makes sense. That’s why if you want to work at the FBI, it’s a good idea to prove to them you can win a game of Clue.

alonebythelighthouse on October 25th, 2020 at 21:24 UTC »

how is it enforced?