Troll if you must, but I don't think anyone bothers asking these kinds of questions.
What does this story mean to you?
In Literature, people come up with their own interpretations of a story, and in this way are active participants in stories, at least in a small way. You read something and it gives you an impression of a larger theme that is going on. One person's impression of what's being said differs from another; this is the basis of all literary discussion.
The nice thing about a forum like this is that we can say all that we wish about a given subject without being interrupted. Coming from a family of seven children, I have to say that this is actually one of the things I enjoy about forums.
Since I've brought it up, I'll be happy to go first.
I feel that this story is trying to explain to you what it means to be an adult, and how one must deal with the outside world as it is today. When we were children, we could get away with a lot more than now, when we are adults. As adults, we are subject to harsh punishment for breaking the rules of society as they exist in our time and place. That is the general theme. Our actions have consequences, and part of being an adult is living with the consequences of your actions in a healthy and emotionally mature way. If we can view the entire human race as one organism (not that hard when there's something like 150 or so people in the world of the game), then we can see that they pursue courses of action that lead to the inevitable consequences of the game's half-way mark. They then must resolve these consequences in the second half of the game.
This is the progression from innocence to experience; one must learn to deal with a changed world, to adapt properly, and to be inventive and resourceful, to think on one's feet.
So what's your interpretation?