U.K. Agency Predicts End of Mandatory Game Ratings

Andy Chalk

One Flag, One Fleet, One Cat
Nov 12, 2002
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U.K. Agency Predicts End of Mandatory Game Ratings


The Video Standards Council [http://www.videostandards.org.uk/] in the U.K. predicts that the rise of the global marketplace for videogames will eventually lead to the end of mandatory games ratings.

You may have heard recently [http://www.escapistmagazine.com/news/view/109917-GOG-Drops-IP-Based-Location-Check] that GOG, after experiencing some unspecified difficulties with using IPs to determine user locations, switched to a system of regional self-reporting, which is to say that if you tell it that you live in, for example, the United States, it assumes that you do actually live in the United States and not in, say, Australia, where you might have to pay more to get a censored version of a videogame. And although the change was in no way intended to assist users in circumventing national content restrictions, it is theoretically possible that such a thing could happen if some unscrupulous customer was to falsely report his location.

That, according to the Video Standards Council, was likely the first step toward the eventual end of mandatory videogame ratings. "It seems inevitable that such systems will have an impact on the way national regulators control online content, though the more authoritarian regimes won't have any qualms about shutting down a site if they deem it necessary," the VSC told Eurogamer [http://www.next-gen.biz/news/age-ratings-unlikely-to-remain-mandatory]. "However, the more benign censorship/ratings organizations will probably move away from the mandatory model and replace it with an advisory system which puts the onus on consumers to make informed buying decisions through the provision of detailed consumer information."

The threat of legal action to stop region-free digital distribution is unlikely, the VSC said, "since any national restrictions are very difficult to enforce where, for example, content is delivered from a foreign server." In GOG's case, the company is owned by CD Projekt, which is based in Warsaw, Poland.

But even if videogame ratings in liberal democracies move away from mandatory enforcement, the VSC believes that rating agencies will remain relevant. "It may be that the nature of censorship and ratings will change to a more advisory-centered system, but ratings systems continue to provide consumers - particularly parents of children - with very useful content information which we know they find very helpful indeed," the agency said. "We believe the public tends to trust the judgment and advice of the more independent, established and respected ratings organizations and will continue to do so."

In the U.S., unlike most Western nations, videogame ratings aren't legally enforceable, as videogames, like books, music and movies, are considered protected speech under the First Amendment. Instead, the Entertainment Software Rating Board works in conjunction with publishers and retailers to operate a voluntary system which can include hefty fines for violations.


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AngryMongoose

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Jan 18, 2010
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"The Video Standards Council in the U.K. predicts that the rise of the global marketplace for videogames will eventually lead to the end of mandatory games ratings."
That's interesting. I wonder when that will happen
*Goes and plays a tentacle rape game on Newgrounds*
 

Saelune

Trump put kids in cages!
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Mar 8, 2011
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Way to put down all the work Mortal Kombat did! (MK "inspired" the start of the ESRB)
 

ToastiestZombie

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Mar 21, 2011
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Well they dont do much anyway most of the 11 to 17 year olds in my school own at least 3 18 rating games so i dont think it would make much a difference to anything
 

samsonguy920

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Mar 24, 2009
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Saelune said:
Way to put down all the work Mortal Kombat did! (MK "inspired" the start of the ESRB)
Take into account this is just the UK, which doesn't use ESRB. What this seems to really put across is that right now in the UK, the ratings are legally enforceable, as in if someone buys a Mature game who isn't old enough, then both they and the gamestore face legal repercussions. And this article puts across the thought, not necessarily the likelihood, that legal enforcement will be abolished. If I was in the UK I wouldn't be getting my hopes up, although there is a lot that goes on in the UK that would be frowned upon by the uptights in the US. I wouldn't mind seeing more places getting this train of thought of ratings being merely advisory as opposed to regulatory.
So the ESRB is here to stay and welcome as an advisory board. The alternative of it becoming a regulatory agency as California's government wants it to be is not preferable.
 

Saelune

Trump put kids in cages!
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Mar 8, 2011
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samsonguy920 said:
Saelune said:
Way to put down all the work Mortal Kombat did! (MK "inspired" the start of the ESRB)
Take into account this is just the UK, which doesn't use ESRB. What this seems to really put across is that right now in the UK, the ratings are legally enforceable, as in if someone buys a Mature game who isn't old enough, then both they and the gamestore face legal repercussions. And this article puts across the thought, not necessarily the likelihood, that legal enforcement will be abolished. If I was in the UK I wouldn't be getting my hopes up, although there is a lot that goes on in the UK that would be frowned upon by the uptights in the US. I wouldn't mind seeing more places getting this train of thought of ratings being merely advisory as opposed to regulatory.
So the ESRB is here to stay and welcome as an advisory board. The alternative of it becoming a regulatory agency as California's government wants it to be is not preferable.
Well, they were just making a general prediction, and two, you wasted alot of effort in responding to my sarcastic comment. Sorry.
 

Woodsey

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Aug 9, 2009
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I don't have a problem with them being legally enforced, but really, once most things start going digital, its going to become a rather fruitless task to try and implement them.

We're quite fortunate to not have a batshit ratings board though - hardly anything has ever been cut or refused classification.
 

Andy Chalk

One Flag, One Fleet, One Cat
Nov 12, 2002
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Saelune said:
Way to put down all the work Mortal Kombat did! (MK "inspired" the start of the ESRB)
I'm not sure what your point is. The ESRB is one of the only, if not the only, rating agency in the world that actually isn't legally enforceable. In fact, it operates on the very system predicted by the VCS: it is entirely voluntary and advisory. And anecdotal evidence aside, it has been repeatedly proven to be the most successful media rating system in North America. We always get people saying that ratings don't matter because they know 13-year-old kids who play GTA or have no problem buying CoD or whatever, but the reality is that ESRB ratings have a compliance rate of well over 80 percent. That's huge.
 

Reed Spacer

That guy with the thing.
Jan 11, 2011
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They may as well get rid of mandatory ratings; they use them, nobody pays attention to them and then they get in trouble, so why bother using ratings? You're screwed even if you have them.
 

Steve the Pocket

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Mar 30, 2009
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I figured someone would catch on to this eventually. Steam already sells a mix of rated and unrated games (at least in the US ? I don't know if indie games like Amnesia carry ratings in other countries, and I'd be interested in knowing) which, even for the US, is unusual considering even the solitaire games that come with Windows have ESRB ratings now for some stupid reason.

Also, because I figure someone had to ask eventually: Who's the naked chick in the picture?