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750 Million People Got Addicted to This Game — It Accidentally Planted a Forest in the Desert China’s deserts have been expanding for decades, swallowing grasslands and sending massive sandstorms into major cities. Few people expected that one of the most effective tools to slow that expansion would come not from bulldozers or policy mandates, but from a phone game used by hundreds of millions of people. This documentary examines how Ant Forest, a gamified feature inside China’s largest mobile payment app, turned everyday actions into real ecological change. By rewarding low-carbon behaviors like walking, using public transport, or paying bills digitally, the app allows users to grow virtual trees that are later planted as real ones in some of China’s most fragile desert regions. We will learn how this system helped plant over six hundred million trees across Inner Mongolia, Gansu, Qinghai, and Shanxi, stabilizing shifting sands and slowing desert expansion that once advanced by nearly one thousand square kilometers per year. The film explains why the saxaul tree was chosen, how its deep roots anchor loose soil, and why large-scale reforestation only works when ecological limits are respected. The story also explores the human dimension behind the numbers. Farmers and herders were paid to plant and maintain forests, creating jobs in areas long affected by poverty. Ordinary city residents, many thousands of kilometers away, were given a direct connection to land they would never visit, yet helped restore. How gamification changed individual behavior at massive scale Why satellite images reveal a striking before-and-after in desert regions What this experiment teaches about technology, incentives, and ecosystem recovery This channel explores real-world cases where human systems, environmental limits, and unexpected solutions intersect to reshape landscapes once considered beyond repair.