Joseph Eid, AFP | A Lebanese man plays a computer game created by Hezbollah in a southern suburb of Beirut on February 27, 2018.

Sidling down the mean streets of Syria with his rifle, he picks off his enemies: Ahmed is the hero of the video game, and hi-tech recruiting tool, launched by Hezbollah on Wednesday.

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The Lebanese Shiite armed group held a ceremony and news conference in Beirut Wednesday to unveil the latest production of its electronic media department, which it named "Sacred Defence – Protecting the Homeland And Holy Sites".

"It reflects Hezbollah's experience in Syria," Hassan Allam, one of the game's developers, told AFP.

Hezbollah of Lebanon released a first-person shooter video game, player is a Hezbollah fighter who fight ISIS, it's name is "Holly defence"

https://t.co/3YdgD8csQy pic.twitter.com/aqZhAkixEK ERSHAD ALIJANI (@ErshadAlijani) March 1, 2018

The first-person shooter game is a low-cost spinoff of bestseller "Call of Duty" that glorifies the group's battles in the ongoing Syrian conflict.

The scenario's introductory sequence has Ahmed in plain clothes visiting the Sayyida Zeinab shrine in the southern suburbs of the Syrian capital of Damascus. Protection of the shrine, one of the holiest in Shiite Islam, has been a rallying cry for recruiting Shiite youths from across the world, particularly Afghanistan, to join the fight in Syria.

The mausoleum comes under attack and Ahmed reappears wearing a military uniform in a room whose walls bear a poster of Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah.

The game allows for a series of different battles, including against the Islamic State (IS) group, in a variety of different locations, including Syria's border with Lebanon.

The Iranian-backed Hezbollah, which forms part of the Lebanese government, is fighting alongside Syrian President Bashar al-Assad in Syria against the hardline Sunni IS group.

‘The player will suffer’

The idea for the game, according to Allam, emerged in 2013, when the Assad regime's grip on Damascus was tenuous and its days looked numbered, but it has since regained significant ground.

"The idea took shape from real events on the ground, that took place in Syria, at the Syrian-Lebanese border and in Lebanon itself," Allam explained.

The game, which will sell for €4 ($5) in gaming shops, is expected to be particularly popular in Shiite-dominated areas such as Beirut's southern suburbs, where the militia's aura is immense.

Allam said the aim was to make players understand "what really happened and what the fighters who made sacrifices were doing".

Hezbollah has lost many hundreds of fighters, including senior commanders, since it deployed some of its forces to Syria.

"To finish one level and move to the next, the player will suffer... He will see how difficult it is for the resistance fighters," Allam said.

The battles a player has to win to complete the game include fighting in Qusayr against rebel groups in 2013, Hezbollah's first major military victory in Syria.

"Sacred Defence" ends with the Ras Baalbek battle in Syria's mountainous border region with Lebanon during which Hezbollah and Lebanese army troops fought on two separate fronts, which saw the jihadists defeated in the summer of 2017.

In a gamer room in southern Beirut among the first to receive a copy, 25-year-old Hussein Mhanna is testing the new Hezbollah product.

"I don't know where the shooting is coming from," said the young man, who is a video game fanatic but was stuck on level 2. "I loved it, I wanted to shoot everybody."

(FRANCE 24 with AFP)

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