The municipal government is investing 9.5m yen ($85,000; £68,000) to develop the app and improve wifi along the route as part of its "peace tourism" drive, the report says. An official tells the paper that the city government wants people to "deeply learn the realities of the damage caused by the atomic bombing", and it`s keen to encourage tourists to stay longer than the day trip that many make.
The city of Nagasaki, bombed three days after Hiroshima, is also using technology to educate people about the devastation wrought by the atomic bomb. Last year, a virtual reality project allowed primary school children to experience what the city was like in the aftermath of the "Fat Man" device exploding over the city, complete with the sounds of stepping on rubble and wind blowing through the ruins.

Hiroshima`s Industrial Promotion Hall - seen here in the 1920s or 1930s - became known as the Atomic Bomb Dome
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