WhiteNachos said:
EvolutionKills said:
Am I the only one who recognizes that context plays a role here?
It's my understanding, and I could be wrong, that the ESRB doesn't actually play games to review them. The developer/publisher seeking a rating submits a video representing 'typical' game play across the spectrum that a player can be expected to experience. This is why GTA: San Andreas got it's original M rating because of course Rockstar wouldn't have submitted footage of the content unearthed with the Hot Coffee mod, because that content is simply not accessible without modding the game (and breaching the EULA if I'm not mistaken). I still think that the ESRB re-labeling GTA:SA as an AO game after the fact over a user created mod was bullshit, so take it for what you will.
So in context, a game where you play a street thug going on crazy adventures that involves gunfights with cops (who are armed antagonists trying to stop you) and the possibility of civilian casualties? Now compare that against a game whose sole purpose appears to be recreating a hate filled psychotic killing spree where the slaughtering of innocent civilians is the goal.
But I can still go on said killing sprees in GTA, Saint's Row, hell even Skyrim.
Right, so let's just ignore everything I was trying to point out and instead continue to hammer on the same tired argument.
Context. While the GTA series will allow a player to kill civilians, it is not the be-all-end-all objective of the game itself nor is it the defining narrative or selling point. GTA is no more a dedicated massacre simulator than Call of Duty or HALO are griefing or harassment simulators just because you can 'tea-bag' your opponents while cursing them out over your headset.
WhiteNachos said:
EvolutionKills said:
In games like GTA it is a possibility, but I never remember a story mission that tasked me with slaughtering civilians on purpose for the sake of killing civilians.
There were missions where you had to kill civilians in GTA. In San Andreas one mission had you piloting a remote control plane killing deliverymen on bikes, another mission had you lock a construction worker in a porta potty, moving it into a hole and then filling the hole with cement with the guy still inside. M rating ladies and gentlemen.
Context and content once again. Those mission easily fall under the 'this is too goofy to be taken seriously' umbrella, as those missions are the most reminiscent of it's gonzo competitor
Saints Row. Also that one mission has CJ trying to scare off the workers for hitting on his younger sister, and involves a series of escalating events before the final admittedly funny 'buried in cement in a porta-john' bit.
CJ didn't graphically dismember those those paperboys, nor was he on a hate fueled rampage lashing out. The only time the game ever got close to being similar to
Hatred in that aspect was towards the final story missions that had you directing that furry at people who had personally betrayed CJ within the game's own narrative.
Also just how much else is there to do in any GTA game? I somehow doubt
Hatred will have you racing cars, playing pool, hanging out with friends, working out at the gym, watching silly TV or comedy shows, trying your hand at being a paper-boy or EMT, or entering a low rider competition.
WhiteNachos said:
EvolutionKills said:
Especially with the wave of mass shootings that have struck the United States in recent years?
Why should that factor into it?
Because cultural context is not created inside a vacuum.
WhiteNachos said:
EvolutionKills said:
That might be enough to push a borderline game over the edge into AO territory. Especially if the footage they were supplied is far more graphic and visceral than what we have access to. But that's another thing to remember, as of yet all we have is screenshots and trailers, none of us have seen the footage the ESRB was given to evaluate; none of us have played the finished game.
Technically neither have they.
Irrelevant point. They also didn't play through GTAV or Skyrim or Fallout or Postal or Soldier of Fortune or the vast majority of games they rate, nor would it be practical to play though every game they rate, nor do they claim to play through every game they rate.
WhiteNachos said:
EvolutionKills said:
There simply could be more than we are not aware of. Or the ESRB could arguably be overacting, both are possibilities.
It's a possibility, but I doubt it. If they put rape or nudity or sex in their game and then pretended they had no idea why their game was AO, then it would just blow back into their face when people found out.
If a movie is looking to be really shocking, does it generally give away it's most shocking moments in the movie's promotional trailer? If it's a decent movie with a decent marketing team, most probably not. I'm just saying that their game is looking to be purposely shocking and controversial, so I doubt they'd show their whole hand in their first trailer; but I could be wrong.