TheKasp said:
llew said:
TheKasp said:
I don't see any problems with that. It is just a bloody game, I played Postal 2 at that age. If the parents feel that he can deal with the content of the game then there is no problem.
Yeah GTA:V and Portal 2 are two VERY different games, comparing them in terms of content is like comparing bread and milk for texture.
I don't get what Po
rtal 2 has to do with this...
Savagezion said:
I agree with that sentiment for sure. However, if your 11 year old kid can handle torturing people and making strippers shake that ass, I really don't see that as a credit to how good of a parent you are in today's world.
I really don't see how this would reflect their parenting skills if the kid is mature enough to understand that this all is just fiction.
GTA5 doesn't really break any ground when it comes to either nudity or violence. Movies and older games did this already and you can bet your ass that enough children did watch or play those without any psychological reprecussions.
11 is not some sacred, everyone is innocent age. Some kids become are more mature and this also includes the ability to not be phased by fictional content. "Torture" and all those things... are just pixels and code with unrealistic looking human puppets.
Seems like I simply can get my blood boiling against something that I've done myself at that and younger age.
I do agree with the sentiment that it depends on the kid but, at the same time, I don't see any reason to allow a 11 year old kid to play a game that celebrates issues adults have a hard time with. For every "it's ok" there is a "no,it's not" and this is with more mature minds trying to come at the subject. Throwing something like that at an 11 year old is only gonna send mixed messages about stuff he/she shouldn't even be focusing on yet. EVERY 11 year old brain is still working on fundamentals and it hasn't even had to deal with puberty yet. It soon will. Puberty however, is when I think it is best to introduce that stuff because puberty actually steps you into the adult world with hormones and pheromones messing with your chemistry and are linked to both sex and violent behavior - but you are still protected by legal system. However, I think puberty will automatically step you in the correct mindset to view the material. What they are trying to appeal TO. What the game is about is easier to see after having went through or being in puberty. Thus, rated M. But that is just my views on it.
I don't care what I got to do as a child. "I don't care what other parents let their kids do, including my own parents." In this scenario, I am the parent that matters. I had a very loose structure growing up and I assure you loose structure has more negatives than more structure for a kid. There is no way I am gonna let my kid be able to do what I could which isn't hard because I have done it. Which just means they will get away with different stuff. But they will always think they get away with "nothing". I am not against all violence and sex in games. I have no problem with any kid who can work a controller and be able to navigate the game themselves playing Mortal Kombat, Def Jam: FfNY, Mass Effect 1, RDR, GTA 1 through Vice City even depending on the kid. Probably San Andreas too. Not GTA 4 or 5 though or Saint's Row, probably not DUke Nukem either - as I don't think the kid is ready because he/she doesn't even know what puberty is like. Just whatever they heard, probably mostly from other 5th and 6th graders. Even if from parents, its just what they've heard, not what they know from experience. They have no frame of reference. They aren't dumb, they are just ignorant. Which is also why I think kids are more capable of behaving more maturely than some adults in many situations.
I don't mean to be all like "no one should let their kid play GTA5" and I certainly ain't calling for a ban. However, if you let me watch your kid, he/she wouldn't be allowed to play GTA5. If they press me I am gonna tell them ALL of this stuff (but nicer and kid friendly) and probably talk with em for about an hour about stuff like this and watching how their minds work in the conversation. Most 11 year olds will get insecure and/or uncomfortable with talks like this with an adult. If they don't you got a good GTA5 candidate. But that's just the beginning. Then you gotta find out what they have been listening to in regards to "mature" conversations.
I got a whole system for this type of thing. Not saying its the only right way, just saying that's how I see it. If your 11 year old understands the context of torture and even just the idea of a lapdance minigame, what have you been exposing that child to? If you think it is all as easy as "fiction vs. fantasy" torture and lap dances are something real that really happens in real life. It is a realistic fantasy. A kid knows people can't cast spells, unless they have a strong imagination. Even then, he/she is pretty sure they can't. But if they can handle torturing in a game, they know what it is and that it really happens to people. It makes them think about that and it's morality. They find out the world is grey on it the deeper they dig. (Most won't dig deep past that though I bet.) It has an impact on their perception of adulthood, of which, they have no frame of reference. I ain't trying to write a book here, so I am gonna stop.
I do agree there could be some exceptions depending on the 11 year old but my views are assuming we are talk a small single digit % here. Which I believe to be the case. 8-16 year olds in the gaming community have not presented themselves well. It is getting better, IMO but I think we are still in the low single digit percentile.