Culture Rescue African artifacts from colonizers' museums in the heist game Relooted - Black people make a game about looting

Semblance studio Nyamakop is back with puzzles, action and a distinct story to tell.​

Jessica Conditt
Senior Editor
Sat, Jun 7, 2025, 2:44 AM GMT+3

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Nyamakop

Relooted is a heist game about reclaiming African artifacts from the Western countries that stole them, developed by independent South African studio Nyamakop. Relooted is set in a future timeline where Western nations have signed a treaty to return plundered items to their African regions of origin, but things aren't going to plan. Western leaders are instead hiding the artifacts away in private collections, so it's up to a ragtag crew based in Johannesburg, South Africa, to strategize and steal them back.

Relooted is broken into missions, and each one includes a briefing about the artifact, an infiltration planning stage, and the heist. Gameplay is a mix of puzzle and action as you case each building, set up your run, and then execute the plan. Once you grab your target artifact, the security alarms go off and you have a limited amount of time to escape, so thorough preparation is key.


In the Day of the Devs reveal video for Relooted, producer Sithe Ncube cites a wild statistic from a pivotal 2018 report on African cultural heritage, saying, "90 percent of sub-Saharan African culture heritage is in the possession of Western collections. That is millions upon millions of deeply important cultural, spiritual and personal artifacts, including human remains, that aren't in their rightful place."

The locations in Relooted are fictional, but the 70 artifacts you have to steal back are real, and they're all currently in Western and private collections, far from their original homes and owners.

Nyamakop is one of the largest independent games studios in sub-Saharan Africa, with about 30 developers working on Relooted right now. Its previous game, the globular platformer Semblance, was the first African-developed IP to ever come to a Nintendo console, hitting the Switch in 2018. In order to get Semblance on the Switch, Nyamakop co-founder Ben Myres had to bootstrap his way around the world, buying one-way tickets and finding new partners on the fly in a daisy chain of game festival appearances. Here's how Myres explained it to Engadget at E3 2018:

"The entry curve into being an indie game developer in South Africa is like a cliff face. Because you don't have the contacts, the platform holders like Xbox, Sony. You don't have reps that live in your country. The press that matter are all here. There isn't a big enough market locally to sell to, so you have to make works to sell to the West, which means you have to go to Western shows and you have to meet Western press. So basically, if you're not traveling a ton, you're not going to be able to make it."

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Nyamakop has grown significantly since 2018, and Relooted is an unabashedly African game built by a majority-POC team, Myres and Ncube said in 2024.

"There is the thing about making games for Africans — we say that a lot," Ncube told GamesIndustry.biz. "We say that should be a thing, we should make games for Africans because we're playing games that were made in the West. But will people even play those games, if you make them? And then if you make games targeting people ... even if you were to make one that's really good, there's no guarantee that you'll have a lot of people playing it. So I think there's some level of confusion, I can say, in terms of unexplored aspects of the African games market."

Relooted is in development for Steam, the Epic Games Store and Xbox Series X/S, and while it doesn't yet have a firm release date, it's available to wishlist.

Source (Archive)
 
Their outfits make me giggle. There's nothing super wrong with them, except blue leopard print boy, just some generic afrofuturism fare.
Then there is just black grandma wearing black grandma wear.

There's Butch McWoman too, that ain't great, but my eyes keep going to the blue leopard print.
 
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I love how these fuckers always act as if this shit was considered all that important when the Europeans started hauling it away. It was treated as garbage by the locals. Or buried in the ground, waiting for some local to come dig it up and sell it to a European, because, again, the locals saw it as worthless garbage.
They would have sold their cultural heritage out for a few ounces of copper or gibs if they were discovered today. They are far safer in western nations the any African nation. A lot of artifacts need climate controlled conditions too and theres no way corrupt niggers would have the foresight to maintain a preservation system instead of plundering the funds for their next Mercedes Benz.
 
Museum heist game does sound pretty cool but the the dressing is a little bit cringe. Whatever gets your name in the news I guess; bet it'll sell poorly and people will moan about Muh Raysism.
Nah, they'll complain that the "wrong" people are buying it, when every random Youtuber plays it just to mock it, and they aren't black enough.

Personally, I'm in favor of the game happening in real life. If you've ever been to a museum, the absolute worst, most depressing part is the quarter-wing dedicated to "African Culture". Just wall after wall covered in the same shitty-looking, low-effort wood and cow-dung masks, donated to a passing Brit by the tribe that killed whoever made the masks.

Museums have massive vaults filled with art from around the world with no room to display it all, yet they insist on wasting valuable wall space to some forgotten African culture (usually only a few centuries old, at most) that was enslaved by the tribe next door and sold to Arabs, always represented entirely by a mask or throwing knife or very rarely some piece of unadorned pottery.
 
There is the thing about making games for Africans — we say that a lot," Ncube told GamesIndustry.biz. "We say that should be a thing, we should make games for Africans because we're playing games that were made in the West. But will people even play those games, if you make them? And then if you make games targeting people ... even if you were to make one that's really good, there's no guarantee that you'll have a lot of people playing it. So I think there's some level of confusion, I can say, in terms of unexplored aspects of the African games market."
Could this negro PRep himself before a major interview? He sounds legitimately retarded
 
I'm seeing a Chinaman in my head saying, "It's all so tiresome"... Wonder how much USAID funding these niggers got get (reminder that despite the revelations, USAID did not have their funding cut and were merely rolled into another cancerous organization to hide their future actions).
can i get source on the usaid stuff?

also the funniest part of this entire shitshow is that these obvious globohomo devs cannot into designing an outfit, they just keep making their characters look like clownerinos
 
so it's up to a ragtag crew based in Johannesburg, South Africa, to strategize and steal them back.
Please tell me there is private security and they have orders to shoot these niggers on sight.
 
What African artifacts? I'll be very disappointed if I don't see manuscripts from Shakespeare, Beethoven, Mozart, etc. and other works by the people the 'we wuz kangs' types claim were black. Maybe it'll have a DLC to loot the Abraham Lincoln library...
Egypt is perhaps the only one whose artifacts worth anything and who might take care of their stuff. The rest, as others have said, it's just wooden masks and silly things.

Alas, I shouldn't be this patronising as my own culture has also silly masks, but that's just some early periods. We also did this in the year 800 a.C.

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Like, I swear I know modern people who look like this.

Thing is, they aren't that special. All cultures make stuff like this during their first stages of development and slowly enter new stages after discovering tools. Africans got stuck there and haven't caught up with the rest of us. Yes, even us Americans pre Columbus were making engineering projects.
 
Every time I go to a museum that has collections including sub Saharan African artifacts no one is even in those rooms. I always figured we only included African art displays to be nice. It isn’t like anyone who isn’t black collects that shit or admires it. Primitive wooden masks compared to Michelangelo’s sculptures lmao imagine.
 
Sorry everyone but I really like african wooden masks. I don't think they are high art but I like them. They are goofy and fun like Native-American headdresses.

These people don't seem to realize that other people interacting with their culture and history can give them power because then others have reason to care about you. This is literally what soft power is and it can pretty effective. The glorious Nipon has ravid fan boys and girls because anime is everywhere and japs think it's cool that you wear kimono and have sushi, ramen and mochi.
 
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