NinjaDeathSlap said:
Grey Carter said:
The UK government recently announced plans for a 25 percent tax break for "video games, animation and high-end television industries" that pass a "cultural test" proving their Britishness.
OK, I know this is going off-topic, but for fuck's sake this pisses me off...
"Britishness" is not a thing! Our culture is not an easily definable entity that can be measured by a test; and even if it could, I can't be the only one who thinks that art that can 'prove' it's 'Britishness' (aka. Art that is patriotic and supports the notion of whatever the hell our government seems to think "Britishness" is) being given preferential treatment is pretty fucking creepy. This isn't all that far away from what Iran is doing with it's game industry, because who needs honest artistic expression when you can have propaganda right? This shit would not fly in the British film industry that's for sure.
Britain is historically one of the most multi-cultural places on Earth. If there's anything about British culture that we should be celebrating, it's how malleable we are. The sort of skin-head, flag-touting bigots who like to make such a big deal about what it means to be truly 'British', don't seem to realise that to be 'British' is to be, ethnically speaking, equal parts Italian, German, Danish and French,
at least! Asking anyone or anything to 'prove Britishness' is nothing more than empty, xenophobic, nationalistic wank-speak to appease clueless Daily Mail readers!
Right, I'm done. I'll get off my soapbox now.
Before you jump to conclusions about how the Government is a jingoistic racist propaganda-promoting machine, perhaps you should do more research beyond looking at the word "Britishness" and ranting about it.
Unlike you, I actually did some research on what this "Cultural test" is. Source: http://www.computerandvideogames.com/383106/uk-tax-breaks-video-games-cultural-test-revealed/
To summerize, very little of the test is even British. In fact, almost all games likely qualify, and it is closer to a European Economic Area test.
You need to get 16 points across the following categories:
Location, depending on % of the game set in specific locations. Max 4 if you set it in the EEA, Max 3 if the location is entirely unspecified.
Characters, Max of four points if leads are from EEA or an unspecified location.
Story, 4 points for relating to any EEA state
Language, up to 4 points based on use of regional dialects
Contribution, up to 4 points based on development of british culture (basically, monty python references will get you 4 points)
Where the work is carried out, up to 3 points for developing the game in the UK
Up to 8 points for the people working on the video game actually living in the UK.
So lets see how far we can stretch this point system. Imagine the following scenario:
I am an Indie developer in the UK making a game about sentient floating boxes in a void. I get 3 points for the 100% unspecified location. 4 points for the unspecified character's homeplace. 4 points considering I am using British English as the games dialogue. 3 points for the game being entirely developed in the UK, and 8 points since I technically fulfil every job position as a 1-man indie dev team. That comes to a total of 22 points.
A game about sentient floating boxes in a void is sufficiently British to pass the test.
Basically any game being developed in the UK by UK citizens will get 15 of the 16 needed points simply from development location, hired staff and language.