"To see somewhere where you live day to day and you can be in it in a game -- it's a world of fantasy," said Corey Cash.
Cash has spent the last two years building a to-scale version of the Myrtle and Broadway intersection into the video game Halo. In about a month he plans to make the map playable for all.
"As the first map I've built since I was in middle school, I felt like Myrtle Broadway would be approachable enough, but challenging and impressive enough at the same time," said Cash.
The major difference is that the virtual Bushwick is floating in space.
"Earth was destroyed in the timeline of the video game Halo. So for this to fit with the video game, this entire intersection is on an asteroid," said Cash