Is It Wrong to Assassinate the President in a Videogame?

John Funk

U.N. Owen Was Him?
Dec 20, 2005
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Is It Wrong to Assassinate the President in a Videogame?



In games like Call of Duty 4, gamers step into the shoes of U.S. soldiers slaughtering Middle Eastern militants without a second thought. But when we switch the roles around - even target the President - is it suddenly offensive?

Games - and gamers - are no stranger to controversy. We decry it when modern TV networks portray our hobby inaccurately, seeing offensive material where there is none (so we think). We wholeheartedly reject the definition of violent games as "murder simulators." But ... what happens when someone intentionally makes a game that is a murder simulator - in fact, a murder simulator where your target is the sitting President of the United States of America?

As Kate McKiernan relates in Issue 215 of The Escapist, that was the case with The Night of Bush Capturing: Virtual Jihadi [http://www.wafaabilal.com/html/virtualJ.html], a game mod created by Iraqi-born American artist Wafaa Bilal as a way to draw attention to the plight of Iraqi citizens under the American invasion and occupation. Bilal soon found himself in the center of an argument about morality and censorship - why is it okay for one game to demonize an entire group (in this case, Arabs and Muslims) as evil, but not to do the reverse?

[blockquote]Virtual Jihadi is a game where it's easy to see the delineations between the medium (a first-person shooter), the content (shooting American soldiers and assassinating Bush) and the speech (racist generalizations are dangerous). The game uses the videogame medium as a chance to explore what would drive someone to become a suicide bomber (the content). By taking the player through the grief of the senseless death of a family member, Bilal asks the player to consider - not approve, but consider - where these bombers are coming from (the speech). It encourages players to consider that if The Night of Bush Capturing is a mindless recruiting tool for racist violence, Quest for Saddam may be as well.[/blockquote]

To read the full story, check out "Cease Fire: A Look at Virtual Jihadi" [http://www.escapistmagazine.com/articles/view/issues/issue_215/6393-Cease-Fire-A-Look-at-Virtual-Jihadi] in Issue 215 of The Escapist.

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Anachronism

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Apr 9, 2009
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What's the big deal? Everyone who's played Destroy All Humans! has already killed the President. And taken his place afterwards.

Ok, I realise that's not as topical and/or controversial as this has the potential to be, especially since DAH was meant to be a comedy game, but I still think frying the President alive with your trusty Zap-O-Matic is worse than shooting him with a sniper rifle. Besides, nobody seems to care about the games where you assassinate Middle Eastern political leaders, so why should killing the President be any different? I would have thought a lot of people would want to play a game where you get to kill Dubya, to be honest.

Maybe it's just me.
 

Simalacrum

Resident Juggler
Apr 17, 2008
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well I do see the moral dilema here, and it just shows us more than ever that the saying "history is written by the winners" is ever so true. Personally, I applaud the game for trying to put things through the view of the other side. And shooting George Bush? Please, there are a million games that do that on the interweb already, why does this one suddenly make it a controversy?
 

Swaki

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Apr 15, 2009
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whats the deal whit that guys jaw?
also i see no problem in turning around the tables, its been done tons of times before, even in situations whit a clear evil team (the blue) vs the clearly good team (the red).

also theres been plenty of games where you could play as the nazis killing of the americans, and where you could be the aliens trying to kill of the human race and so on.
 

Arkhangelsk

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Mar 1, 2009
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I thought games were about freedom to do what you want? Oh, sure, we're allowed to kill Middle East terrorists cause they're against America, but when it's the reverse, suddenly it's unpatriotic and evil. Games are sometimes a bit too patriotic and biased. Imagine if a game company in Iraq made a modern day shooter with the same patriotism, but for Iraq.
 

Abedeus

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Sep 14, 2008
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Mornelithe said:
Actually, I think I'd be pretty psyched about a game that focuses on assassinations (Hitman?). I Don't see any problem with it.
Come to think of it, Hitman has already killed the president. Fact is fact, it was a phoney one, but still.


Also, Futurama killed McNeil the president. Because he wasn't the hot bimbo single female lawyer McNeil.
 

Amnestic

High Priest of Haruhi
Aug 22, 2008
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Red Alert 2 had me killing the President as memory serves. Or did I just mind control him? I forget. Either way, I'm fairly certain I blew the White House up at some point in that game.

"Is it wrong to Assassinate the President in a videogame?" No more so than it's wrong to kill anyone else.

There was that JFK assassination game I remember seeing at a LAN party once where you took the role of Lee Harvey Oswald sniping the President. I thought it was a tad odd that it'd simulate an actual assassination, but it's just a game.

The longer that people patronise the populous' "inability" to separate fact from fiction, the less I'm willing to listen to them when they actually bring up relevant and interesting points.
 

LeonLethality

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Mar 10, 2009
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I have to say its because of people thinking you can only kill the "bad guy" in real world relations and americans dont want americans to do this sort of thing but they can assassinate anyone from the middle east yeah this is just plain wrong and I side with Bilal
 

Lono Shrugged

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May 7, 2009
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It can't be any worse than JFK reloaded.
And honestly compared to that game where you hunt down Bin Laden and fight him hand to hand combat. (I think it was top ten most wanted) It's hardly that offensive.

I think this guy is cashing in on hatred the exact same way.
 

The Great JT

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Oct 6, 2008
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You mean I get to shoot George W. Bush, the man who launched us into a useless, unnessecary, unwanted war, in the face?! Sign me up!
 

Dyp100

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Jul 14, 2009
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Hmmm, if you put Obama in one of these games I'm sure you'd get someone complaining at killing the president and how it was racist. xD

And is it wrong? No...It's just fiction, if Thompson was right, then yes, but the world isn't that stupid and corruptible, is Bush dead? No, just proving it's fine to kill him as much as random US soldier #33...In a video game, of course. >.>
 

oneniesteledain

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Aug 5, 2009
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*is poster #15*

*realizes that many red flags just went up in ECHELON*

Seriously, though, it's not any more harmful than a 14 year old girl writing "KILL BUSH" in her blog.

Oh wait, the Secret Service did find that harmful...
 

Soxafloppin

Coxa no longer floppin'
Jun 22, 2009
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Personally i think you should be allowed to do pretty much anything in a game, after all...Its in a game.
 

oneniesteledain

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Aug 5, 2009
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crazyhaircut94 said:
I thought games were about freedom to do what you want? Oh, sure, we're allowed to kill Middle East terrorists cause they're against America, but when it's the reverse, suddenly it's unpatriotic and evil. Games are sometimes a bit too patriotic and biased. Imagine if a game company in Iraq made a modern day shooter with the same patriotism, but for Iraq.
Actually, a modern patriotic Iraqi game may very well find the player killing insurgents, depending on if it was told from the point of view of the government, or the violent minority that attacks people.
 

DeadlyYellow

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Jun 18, 2008
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Spucktier said:
To bring a completely different question into the mix: who's the cg guy in this pictures and why does he disguise his chin as testicles? o_O
Sexpionage? Reconnoisex?

On topic. Killing a made up presidential figure is not that big a deal (take that Richardson.) It's when they target an actual person that it borders on offensive. I'm pretty sure it could get an American game developer deep-sixed.