...Really dude? Really? Feel free to disagree with people, but that's no reason to let common respect fly out the window.major_chaos said:Its OK guys, game is back, you can stop complaining about nonexistent censorship and go back to furiously jerking it to your creepy snuff porn game.
Make sure to flag his comment for review. Pretty slam dunk as far as moderation is concerned.erttheking said:...Really dude? Really? Feel free to disagree with people, but that's no reason to let common respect fly out the window.major_chaos said:Its OK guys, game is back, you can stop complaining about nonexistent censorship and go back to furiously jerking it to your creepy snuff porn game.
I will, because it's true. I know you have issues with truth statements, but I don't.Signa said:Go ahead and keep saying that.
Wait wait wait....marketplaces should not have the right to determine the content they sell? Really?Strazdas said:Ill say the same thing i said about Apple removing Papers, Please.
Do they have a legal right to do this? Of course.
Should they have a legal right to do this? In my opinion - no.
That is absolutely, completely, 100% wrong definition of censorship.Strazdas said:Steam is PC games store, therefore it is expect that it sells PC games and not android games. When it fails to sell PC games based on its personal beliefs it is censorship. When it fails to sell Android games it is because Steam is not an Android store.
More to the point, and this is the part Signa clipped in his quote mine:MarsAtlas said:That might be true if there was any sort of real campaign to have Hatred removed.
So yeah.This isn't a slippery slope, as the store has always been the final arbiter of its stock.
Facts have long been irrelevant in gamer outrage. The craziest part is, when we're portrayed as reactionary and childish, we get even more reactionary and childish. But this in itself should be proof of why people feel that way.Baresark said:The craziest part is this. No one knows why Valve actually took the game down.
Because it was only at that point, on page four of like the fourth topic on the matter, that respect flew out the window.erttheking said:...Really dude? Really? Feel free to disagree with people, but that's no reason to let common respect fly out the window.
I call it where I see it and when I have the strength to do it.Zachary Amaranth said:Snip
Thanks! I will make sure to do thatmajor_chaos said:Its OK guys, game is back, you can stop complaining about nonexistent censorship and go back to furiously jerking it to your creepy snuff porn game.
I'm sorry but I can't help but imagine the character in your avatar saying this. Somehow it's oddly apropriate...major_chaos said:Its OK guys, game is back, you can stop complaining about nonexistent censorship and go back to furiously jerking it to your creepy snuff porn game.
Except Valve isn't forced. I would very much appreciate a JimQuisition on the wrong use or image of ?forced? in the same way as ?censorship?.Orange12345 said:Last Week: "Target listened to their customers concerns and acted on them"
This Week: "Valve is being forced to sell something they don't want to"
stay classy internet
I'll gladly start censoring myself when books, movies, tv, and every other medium stops doing the same. Human Centipede 1 and 2 exist, Saw exists, various horribly graphic books exist. I don't see any difference other than the Media and moral police scare of "But.. but pressing buttons will make people more likely to commit crimes!"VoidWanderer said:I have been thinking about this for days. And yes, the game is pandering to those who care only for violence, with no moral code. Can I point out that there is already a game similar to this? It's called Grand Theft Auto.
Didn't like that example? How about Mortal Kombat? Gratuitous violence with very little tying it together.
I know that this well get people up in arms, but does this invalidate my point? Do you remember the first time GTA came out, the public outrage over the lack of limits in the game, where you can kill anyone if you want.
While, yes, we should censor ourselves as gamers, but censoring a game based around violence, seems hypocritical doesn't it?
that's the joke, last week a bunch of people were defending Targets right to not sell something based on consumer feedback and now valve is selling something based on consumer feedback and a bunch of people are acting like their being forced into it. And I find that hilarious personally.Ishigami said:Good to see Gabe listening to reason.
It was by all means a hastily and poorly made decision.
Except Valve isn't forced. I would very much appreciate a JimQuisition on the wrong use or image of ?forced? in the same way as ?censorship?.Orange12345 said:Last Week: "Target listened to their customers concerns and acted on them"
This Week: "Valve is being forced to sell something they don't want to"
stay classy internet
Stay classy Orange?
Naw man. Mortal Kombat requires a degree of skill. This apparently doesn't.VoidWanderer said:I have been thinking about this for days. And yes, the game is pandering to those who care only for violence, with no moral code. Can I point out that there is already a game similar to this? It's called Grand Theft Auto.
Didn't like that example? How about Mortal Kombat? Gratuitous violence with very little tying it together.
I know that this well get people up in arms, but does this invalidate my point? Do you remember the first time GTA came out, the public outrage over the lack of limits in the game, where you can kill anyone if you want.
While, yes, we should censor ourselves as gamers, but censoring a game based around violence, seems hypocritical doesn't it?
Both of them were business decisions (I assume. There has been no 100% confirmed info of what happened backdoors)Orange12345 said:that's the joke, last week a bunch of people were defending Targets right to not sell something based on consumer feedback and now valve is selling something based on consumer feedback and a bunch of people are acting like their being forced into it. And I find that hilarious personally.Ishigami said:Good to see Gabe listening to reason.
It was by all means a hastily and poorly made decision.
Except Valve isn't forced. I would very much appreciate a JimQuisition on the wrong use or image of ?forced? in the same way as ?censorship?.Orange12345 said:Last Week: "Target listened to their customers concerns and acted on them"
This Week: "Valve is being forced to sell something they don't want to"
stay classy internet
Stay classy Orange?
You have to inspect more closely which people say what. There are more and more gamers each year, with more diverse opinions than those 5 or 10 years ago.Cecilo said:I'll gladly start censoring myself when books, movies, tv, and every other medium stops doing the same. Human Centipede 1 and 2 exist, Saw exists, various horribly graphic books exist. I don't see any difference other than the Media and moral police scare of "But.. but pressing buttons will make people more likely to commit crimes!"VoidWanderer said:I have been thinking about this for days. And yes, the game is pandering to those who care only for violence, with no moral code. Can I point out that there is already a game similar to this? It's called Grand Theft Auto.
Didn't like that example? How about Mortal Kombat? Gratuitous violence with very little tying it together.
I know that this well get people up in arms, but does this invalidate my point? Do you remember the first time GTA came out, the public outrage over the lack of limits in the game, where you can kill anyone if you want.
While, yes, we should censor ourselves as gamers, but censoring a game based around violence, seems hypocritical doesn't it?
Edit: I really. Don't understand people anymore, for years we argued and fought for the right for games to be considered art, and now that we are here, people are going "Fuck it. We don't like certain stuff, remove it." Defeating the entire purpose of the it's art, it's protected fight.