Monday, February 4, 2008

The State of the Union: Gaming 'Round the World

America isn't everything, even though Super Tuesday is tomorrow, but other countries have gaming controversies as well. Some of them have it even worse off, despite the fact there's no Thompson, Clinton, Romney, or Lieberman in their country. I'll quickly summarize the state of gaming in several other countries recently.


China:
As GamePolitics reported today on a very old blog post from Henry Jenkins of MIT, China doesn't care so much as the United States about violence in video games so much as "gaming addiction". The notion of gaming addiction is supposed to loosen traditional family and community bonds and decrease productivity, and Jenkins argues that it benefits China to build the concept of an addiction to gaming. This would provide justification for China's increasingly restrictive policies on the internet and video games. China has banned all sorts of things online and modified a few others: China has banned children from internet cafes, imposed time restrictions on visiting those cafes, banned certain games for showing China didn't always belong to the current regime, and forced Google to support the great firewall. As capitalist of a communist country China is, they're still really restrictive about the internet, putting them at about the worst civilized country to be in if you're a gamer.

Germany: Germany has a strange couple of rulings on games as well. First of all, they don't allow any swastikas in their games or anything that's "not art", which is way more trouble than it's worth, but not very important. In a very strange decision, Half-Life was forced to tone the entire game down by a lot, resulting in robots instead of marines, no blood, vanishing enemies, and other nonsense.

Greece: Alright, this is the worst country for a gamer in the world, assuming you're not in a third-world country. In 2002, Greece right-out outlawed gaming. Nothing from solitaire to Brain Age could be played in Greece, even by foreigners just arriving in the nation. There was obviously a tremendous outcry, and the ban was reduced to only apply to internet cafes in December 2003. That was a close one.

Finland: Another recent story from GamePolitics, the Finnish Christian Democrats are asking for an extra screening process on video games to be doubly sure they don't have any hidden bad things. The Finnish Games and Multimedia Association was quick to say that the process is really rather unnecessary and would simply hurt the industry by giving Finnish gamers a reason to buy their games from elsewhere while they face delays and possible censorship, sidestepping the extra process. I wouldn't expect this to go anywhere especially, it's just a party considering the motion, but I'm not exactly up on my Finnish politics, either.

South Korea: Take China's information, and tone it down a lot. South Korea has banned several of the usual violent video games like Grand Theft Auto and Manhunt, but also has a slight issue with games involving the two Koreas. Mercenaries, Ghost Recon, and Splinter Cell have all been banned due to either showing North and South Korea at war or destroying Korean land in the games.

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

I am surprised that you did not Include India which has recently been made a target of such un-democratic policies...but yeah the grey market still exists and thrives pretty well.We have smoking banned in Bollywood which churns out more movies than Hollyqood each year and caters to a wider audience all acrooss the globe.

Neelesh Mukherjee
Freelance Journalist
Split-Screen.com
Gameguru.in
neelesh.mukherjee@gmail.com
eshneel@hotmail.com

Unknown said...

Sorry, I didn't notice anything recently about India, but this will likely be a recurring story, maybe every Monday I'll do one of these. I'll look up what you're talking about and I'll be sure to include India next time.

Unknown said...

That's interesting, but I bet you didn't know about a little controversy that happened in Mexico because of the Ghost Recon Advanced Warfighter games... The mexican goverment tired to ban the games from selling in the country, but they weren't able to... It happened again with the second game, that took place on the US-Mexico border in the city of Juarez. The governor of Chihuahua managed to successfully ban the game from selling on all the formal channels (the game still was sold on the so called "gray market" though).

The game was banned because it pictured the american army destroying part of the mexican city. Another controversy in Mexico took place when Nintendo of America, helped by the police, organized a raid to fight piracy and the black market.

By the way, I'm Mexican and I live in the state where GRAW2 was banned... The mexican video game market is still on diapers, and I think the controversies are just about to get worse...

Anonymous said...

Well THAT explains why 12-Million Mexican's have illegally come to the USA! They're all GAMERS here to play what they can't back home...