The ESRB Don't Get No Respect 61
Via the ffwd linklog, a story on the Hollywood Reporter site discussing the public image of the ESRB, from "pain in the butt" on the developer's side to lax child perverter on the lawmaker's side. From the article: "The issue Greenberg describes is one involving dollars and cents: Almost every single retail chain chooses not to sell 'AO' rated games, period. In just the same way that many movie theaters will not show films branded with an 'NC-17' rating, the 'AO' severely limits a game's distribution, to put it mildly."
Horrible! (Score:1, Flamebait)
WOOSH! (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Horrible! (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Horrible! (Score:1)
Shocked, shocked I am (Score:5, Insightful)
"Oh.. we only want to help parents to make an educated CHOICE... we don't want to censor anything."
Look it up, those were the "pro" arguments for such a system.
And now we have attempts at laws to ban shops from even displaying M rated games (unless you go into that back room) and AO is right out.
Meanwhile the game industry is playing the same game as the movie industry is. R rated movies (M games) sell better than the PG stuff.
(Of course that's been changing since the crackdown of theaters to actually ID people for R rated movies... My friend laments that the Ring 2 was PG-13. How scary can it be in PG-13?!)
Not that I'm disparaging parents from making an educated decision. It's a double edged sword.
Re:Shocked, shocked I am (Score:2, Insightful)
As a game developer and as a parent I have to say I'm very pleased with the rating system. It informs the parent's of the content as well as rewards developers for limiting the amount of graphic violence, sex, etc. by informing the public and letting them decide what they want to play.
An interesting side-note: G rated movies sell better than all other movies.
Not true... (Score:3, Informative)
In the top 20, there are 2.
Finding Nemo and Lion King.
(and on an intersting side note, both movies involved show the horrific and traumatic death of a parent!)
Re:Not true... (Score:1)
Tell me about it. When I show the movie to my three-year-old, I skip past that part. Rated G my ass!
Re:Not true... (Score:2)
Re:Shocked, shocked I am (Score:3, Insightful)
That's all true, but the AO (Adult Only) rating is ridiculous. I totally understand the difference between E (Everyone) and T (Teen), as a 13 years old is slighly more mature than an 8 years old. Same goes for the difference
Re:Shocked, shocked I am (Score:2)
Wrong. (Score:1)
Re:Shocked, shocked I am (Score:4, Interesting)
"Oh.. we only want to help parents to make an educated CHOICE... we don't want to censor anything."
One fact that gets lost in comments like these - and really, you should know better - is that the ESRB is part of the game industry. Literally. It is comprised of all of the game developers and publishers who choose to participate in it. A publisher is perfectly free not to pay the membership fees, not to have ESRB representatives and not to have their games rated. It is a voluntary system that is funded by the publishers themselves. Most publishers choose to be a part of it for several reasons, including the fact that certain large chain stores will not accept unrated games for sale.
As a former member of the industry myself, I know a bit about how the ESRB works. Rating games is an almost shockingly simple yet seemingly arbitrary process. Publishers are told to send samples of the most prurient and violent content of their games, and then a panel of three average people rate what they see. This panel constantly rotates. They do not play the games. They may make their ratings based on the ten minutes of video the publisher sends.
You would think this process would be open to all sorts of abuse on both sides (especially given that it's an industry-funded organization), but in reality there are all sorts of checks and balances that prevent that from happening. There is an appeals process if a publisher believes their game was rated too harshly, and all ratings are subject to review. Conversely, a publisher faces heavy fines (and paying the fines is not voluntary, if you want to keep getting your games rated), not to mention a potential embarassing recall, if they are found to have withheld content that would result in a harsher rating or additional content descriptors.
Most publishers are pretty good about this stuff. It is rarely a surprise to a publisher when a game gets a particular rating or particular content descriptors - I mean most publishers were not born yesterday, they go through this many, many times a year and they pretty much know what to expect. Some of the descriptors themselves can be pretty goofy - I remember one of the games I worked on got a T rating with a descriptor of "Mild Lyrics", whatever the hell that means. "We just want to warn you... these lyrics, are really not that bad!" (The ESRB does provide specific definitions of all descriptors to publishers, but some of them are still a little wacky.) Most of the goofy ones, though, are not really worth worrying about. The one thing that trips some publishers up sometimes are distinctions between things like "cartoon violence" and plain old "violence", which can mean the difference between a T and an M rating. But even that's pretty rare, because the ESRB is pretty specific about what defines each of those descriptors, and again, publishers usually have plenty of past experience to go on.
I think the point I'm trying to make is that this is a more symbiotic relationship than most people think. Yes, publishers can groan every once in a while about the process or their ratings or whatever. But it's not the way a dissident groans about his government; it's more like the way a kid groans about his parents. The ESRB is literally related to the game publishers, and everybody is part of the same industry.
It may surprise many of you to know also that few, if anybody, in the industry want to get rid of the ESRB. Because they know the alternative is government action. The ESRB, as the game industry's self-regulating body, is obviously far preferable to getting congress and law enforcement involved. It's in the industry's best interests for the ESRB to be as effective as possible, and unfortunately the retailers have been letting the industry down in terms of ratings enforcement. At all the ESRB meetings I had to attend (and yes, I groaned at these along with everybody else) the complaints were always centered around retailers screwing everything up for the rest of the industry, not about the ESRB itself.
Censorship breeds stupidity (Score:2)
And that's why we want to censor things and protect children: we are afraid they will learn the wrong thing. We trade the possibility of learning the wrong thing for the certainty of learning nothing at all.
But we also have a very broad definition of "the wrong thing". The wrong thing is "anything I don't want you to learn yet". And what we don't want our children to l
Re:Censorship breeds stupidity (Score:2)
So, I'm an uneducated simpleton because I've never played GTA? What important life lesson have I missed?
Or anything we would be uncomfortable with them emulating.
That seems to be exactly what you are opposed to. Seri
Re:Censorship breeds stupidity (Score:2)
> I've never played GTA?
No, but I propose that you *might* learn something useful and positive from GTA. There *might* be a baby in that bathwater. Perhaps you should check before throwing it out.
> Seriously, why shouldn't parents know and
> control what their kids are buying?
They should, and in that order. If you have never played GTA, you do not know enough about it to control your children's access to it appropriately, so you shouldn't try to control it
Re:Censorship breeds stupidity (Score:2)
I play board games with my daughter all the time. The age ratings are very useful. Its hard to know in advance: does the game involv
Re:Shocked, shocked I am (Score:2)
Not a replacement (Score:5, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Not a replacement (Score:3, Insightful)
Why do I never have mod points when I need them? (Score:2)
Parents that care + Information = Good Parenting!
The ratings are a great idea, and I think they did a wonderful job creating the system, but just like the poison warning symbol on that container of anti-freeze they only work if the parents take the time to teach their kids.
Re:Not a replacement (Score:2)
Not an escuse for NOT having a rating system.
Re:Not a replacement (Score:3, Interesting)
True, but parents need a guide. We can't possibly know everything about every game out there, so we need to make quick decision for our children when we're renting and purchasing games. Cartoonish games like Jak 2 and 3, Ratchet & Clank, etc. all carry "T" ratings, but otherwise how would we know about all of the violence in those games? The covers look innocent enough. Some are obvious, like GTA, Halo, war simulations. Ot
Article mixing facts (Score:4, Insightful)
The article paints a picture of "lawmakers vs. ESRB", but it mentions one Republican who is accusing the ESRB of being too light on handing out AOs, and another (Clinton) of launching an investigation into the effects of M games.
Now, read that again. Clinton (and, for that matter, almost every other lawmaker "fighting the good fight") doesn't have a problem with the rating system, they have a problem with the games. The article only has one quote from one senator that thinks the ESRB is not tough enough. Then the article goes on to point out how tough the ESRB is. And the insight they give there is pretty spot-on, espeically the comparisons between the MPAA and the ESRB.
However, the majority of the article is a defense against the first politician's quote, and doesn't really hold water against the other attacks (which are against videogames that have been rated M, not the rating system itself). Besides, it isn't the ESRB's job to ensure that games rated M aren't sold to 17 year olds, it is the retailer's job. And video game (only) retail stores are pretty scuzzy to begin with, especially the chain ones.
Re:Article mixing facts (Score:1)
Censor is BS (Score:3, Insightful)
The parent is the one responsible for communicating to the kids what's appropriate or not. Not the fucking paper label.
Re:Censor is BS (Score:4, Informative)
Example, Carmageddon was banned in Australia I believe, as well as Postal 2 and more that I can't remember off hand.
Also, it may be the parent's job to do so, but you have to admit that children can be pretty convincing/conniving if they want a game that is "Adult" enough. And, the industry is pretty guilty of trying to sell on that type of appeal, whether they want to admit it or not.
Re:Censor is BS (Score:1)
Nah. The belief is it takes a village to raise a child. So it doesn't matter what you screw up as a parent, because you always get to blame the village. You've only gotta look at some of the headlines nowadays to see that's the way people (politicians, media, whatever) spin it. The era of personal responsibilty seems to be gone.
The trouble with the ESRB. (Score:5, Insightful)
G - Kid's cartoon
PG - Action movie without much violence
R - Movie with enough violence and/or sex to be a concern for children
Do people know what E, T, M mean? Well, I was reading a review of The Incredibles for Gamecube on Amazon. The angry dad reviewer said he wanted to get the game for his kid, but he was upset that it was "Teen" rated. He thought it was inappropriate for a game based on a G Rated movie (of course, The Incredibles was PG, but never mind.).
It's clear that T, in this case, was meant to indicate a PG rated game. Instead, T means an age group. It is more like the "reccomended for kids 8 and up" notes on toys than a movie rating.
Some parents see the system as:
E = games for kids
T = games for thuggy teenagers
M = X-Rated games that should be banned.
So, of course the ERSB gets no respect. They've failed to create a coherent rating system.
Re:The trouble with the ESRB. (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:The trouble with the ESRB. (Score:2)
The ratings are listed here [esrb.org], complete with both general descriptions and the minimal age.
SPOT ON! That's *exactly* it (Score:1)
As more content comes out on more formats, a simple consistant rating system will be needed for everyone's sake and for everyone's friggin piece of
Re:The trouble with the ESRB. (Score:2)
The ESRB has recently released an additional rating "E-10", which is designed to handle this sort of situation. It's basically compatable with PG, whereas T is now associat
Re:The trouble with the ESRB. (Score:2)
To me, the "gallons" of blood portrayed in Mortal Kombat are simply comical by comparison. Where Splinter Cell's violence is cold blooded and calculated execution of a human life.
I realize that t
Worms Armageddon rated E with red blood (Score:2)
All the more reason (Score:2)
When i was young (Score:3, Funny)
(UK ratings)
U-(univeraly safe) Boring no chance of nudity of cool fights
UC(universal for children) yawn even less chance of nakidness or violence
pg-(parental guidance)possibly someone will say sh*t , or someone will bleed , yawn still no nudity
12:(age min) hm this could be ok , perhaps some blood and explosions , still no nakedness though
15:(age min)could be some really cool gore , not much chance of nakedness but we may see a nipple WOOO
18:(Age min) wow must see this , this film is for 18 year olds so it must have some great naked women in it and
You see this is why raitings don't work , you slap an 18 or mature on it and kids are going to go out of there way to play it or whatch it . you ban it and you make it a cult
Gouverment sanctioned censorship just does not work.
I say slap a PG on everything , as honestly it is up to parents to raise their children
When i have children i will decide what they whatch not some rating designed by a bored that does not know my child , Children mature at difrent rates, alot of children will be fine playing a game like GTA 3 when they are 11 or , but some may be disturbed by a film like Ghostbusters when they are 17.
I'll tell you whats f'd up about ESRB. (Score:5, Funny)
Re:I'll tell you whats f'd up about ESRB. (Score:2)
How the hell should we know?
yay mind control! (Score:1)
Re:yay mind control! (Score:1)
But still, it deprived us of Doom3: RoE and God of War. Meh, at least Resident Evil 4 made it to the stores albeit with two gam
Re:yay mind control! (Score:2)
Anyone else notice.... (Score:1)
That all of the examples of "what is in these horrible horrible games all come from one specific game? Namely GTA, everyone's favourite whipping boy.
They should really pass a law that forces politicians to actually have a clue about things before they shoot there mouths off. Of course, that will never happen, as it would put them all out of work.
Re:Anyone else notice.... (Score:2)
FuckedCompany said this a few weeks ago... (Score:3)
Why won't they sell AO games? (Score:1)
If Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas was rated AO - which it probably should be considering it has rampant violence and Vice City at least had cartoon nudity (I have not yet played San Andreas, waiting for the XBOX version)... I would still buy it. And a lot of adults would still buy it. It would be stupid for stores not to sell it.
I think par
Re:Why won't they sell AO games? (Score:2, Informative)
Ask Jesus Castillo... [cbldf.org]
The details of the case:
1. Jesus Castillo managed a comic book store which had an "Adults Only" section.
2. Some concerned citizens in the area decided to make an example out of him. They sent a Vice Squad cop in to buy a copy of the Legend of the Overfiend manga.
3. Jesus Castillo was arrested for obscenity. His case wended it's way through the courts. The Supreme Court denied his last appeal.
4. As of August 5th, 2003 Castillo
Re:Why won't they sell AO games? (Score:1)
Simple solution (Score:2)
Announce a "brand new" ratings system and make a straight 1:1 switch to MPAA ratings.
E -> G
Y? -> PG (can't remember letter)
T -> PG-13
M -> R
AO -> X
In spite of all their efforts, parents just aren't getting it. Perhaps it's time to switch to something they already understand.
Fairly interesting (Score:3, Insightful)
ao 1*+ has to do with pornagraphy laws (Score:2)
Re:ao 1*+ has to do with pornagraphy laws (Score:2)