[quote name='mykevermin']This is something that should NEVEREVEREVER be used as a reason for not doing something. The religious right can and will find something to protest with or without Manhunt 2 in this world, and even those things should be held sacred and protected.
I can't believe you're advocating giving in and giving up on something because of the mere presumption of protests by a bloc of people who do nothing BUT complain about the state of moral decay in our society. If this were 80 years ago, they'd be complaining about jazz cats in zoot suits leading to moral depravity as well. Their great grandparents sure did.
Guess who you just gave power and legitimacy to? Jack Thomson. Well done, chap.[/quote]
I'm not advocating giving in or giving up. I'm saying that's Nintendo and now Sony's rationale for not letting Manhunter 2 come out on their system. If you'd pull your head out of the sliced up, swollen, maggot infested vagina for a second you'd realize that when something has a budget of 20 million or whatever it has that it cannot be devoid from its corporate masters.
You know who gives Jack Thomson more power and legitimacy then I do?

ing Rockstar by constantly putting out things to tweak him and people of his ilk. If you want to talk history, let's talk history. You know what happened at the end of the 1920s that those crazy religious psychos without any power did? Ever hear about a thing called the Hollywood Production Code? Here's what governed films for the thirty three years when it was in place:
[quote name='Motion Picture Production Code of 1930 (Hays Code)']General Principles
1. No picture shall be produced that will lower the moral standards of those who see it. Hence the sympathy of the audience should never be thrown to the side of crime, wrongdoing, evil or sin.
2. Correct standards of life, subject only to the requirements of drama and entertainment, shall be presented.
3. Law, natural or human, shall not be ridiculed, nor shall sympathy be created for its violation.[/quote]
History repeats itself my friend and the country is becoming more censored in the mainstream media, not less. As it stands now, gaming is a part of the mainstream media. By the way, Jack Thompson already has legitimacy with the millions of hard line conservatives that agree with him.
[quote name='mykevermin']I pick this one. It's not like Larry Flint collaborated with Annie Liebowitz or "art" types when he fought his fight. He fought for himself and his filthy, filthy, FILTHY magazine (Hustler makes my stomach churn). And he won. Not on any grounds of "art" or "trying to say something for the medium."[/quote]
I think that's what has me most irritated about the whole Manhunt 2 situation. Larry Flint fought his fight on behalf of pornography, a completely adult medium. Rockstar is forcing the issue on behalf of games, a medium that spans everything from Mario Kart to Mortal Kombat. As a longtime anime fan, I remember when Blockbuster tagged all anime as adult because the representation of the medium at the time is that it was adult content only. I don't want to see Wicked City, a movie about spider ladies eating you with a vagina, make it harder to see something like Barefoot Gen, a movie about a young boy dealing with both the literal and metaphorical fallout of the atomic bombing of Hiroshima.
We all know politicians and corporations paint things with a broad brush. Why are we to think it'll be any different from gaming?
[quote name='mykevermin']I'd like to be able to find out, but Grandma and Grandpa...err, Nintendo and Sony, won't let me buy it.[/QUOTE]
I would too. I didn't like the first Manhunt but it had some interesting gameplay gimmicks, especially the microphone aspect of the game. I think Rockstar's a talented development studio, but I think they're stifling creativity in the gaming medium in the future because they're forcing an absurd backlash that will lead to more, not less censorship with their games which strike me as closer to pornography then art.
Besides, it's a poor business decision to release an AO game on a console at this point. I hope in the future it isn't and we see a change, but as it stands right now there's too much risk and not enough reward for making a game like that. My guess is that the AO rating needs to prove itself viable in the PC market before we'll see it on consoles, and so far, it hasn't.