Manhunt 2, Just got an AO rating by the ESRB and may not see the light of day. |
Manhunt 2, Just got an AO rating by the ESRB and may not see the light of day. |
Jun 21 2007, 09:13 PM
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Armor Group: Associates Posts: 16 Joined: 18-June 07 From: Wichita Falls,TX Member No.: 492 |
Hey AT, dunnow if any of you check out 1up.com and have been following this story but I have and here is the links
http://www.1up.com/do/newsStory?cId=3160427 http://www.1up.com/do/newsStory?cId=3160456 But it seems that the ESRB just screwed Rockstar and the gaming populace by doleing out an AO rating for the game, know it doesen't sound like much but the problem lies in the fact that Sony,Nintendo, or Microsoft won't publish any game that gets an AO rating. If this decision is left to stand the game will not be released, sounds like no biggie now but it can only snowball from here it seems to me our chosen pastime is being demonized by politicians and the media. Lets hope the rating gets reconsidered or else this may signal a grim future to come for freedom of expression and or speach in video games. -------------------- |
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Jun 22 2007, 04:41 PM
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Holding these random memories Group: Magister Posts: 3466 Joined: 14-December 02 From: Utah Member No.: 8 |
I think the big difference is in cinema you're just an observer, passive storytelling. With a game, you control the action, you make the choices, and with the wii, you even enact the motions. Its an entirely different experience, and has to be judged accordingly.
And just like the AO with games, NC-17 with films is also a "death note". Because many cinemas won't play films with a rating higher than R, you'll never turn a profit on a NC-17, so the studios cut and trim the film down to R or PG-13 to get more money. -------------------- |
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Jun 22 2007, 05:17 PM
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Armor Group: Associates Posts: 16 Joined: 18-June 07 From: Wichita Falls,TX Member No.: 492 |
I think the big difference is in cinema you're just an observer, passive storytelling. With a game, you control the action, you make the choices, and with the wii, you even enact the motions. Its an entirely different experience, and has to be judged accordingly. And just like the AO with games, NC-17 with films is also a "death note". Because many cinemas won't play films with a rating higher than R, you'll never turn a profit on a NC-17, so the studios cut and trim the film down to R or PG-13 to get more money. Point noted. Hopefully they get the rating down. But now what has me wondering exactly what the hell was in there that was so bad that got it to an AO because the ps2 got the same rating and it has no control scheme that mimics killing someone like the Wii could have possibly had so the AO rating had to have came down from other content. The first game didn't have an AO rating. Hmm makes me wonder. -------------------- |
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Lo-Fi Version | Time is now: 25th September 2024 - 05:20 AM |