ESRB Should Stand Down? 140
Next Generation has a piece wondering if the ESRB should step down in favour of an independent board, to restore the faith of consumers in the game ratings system. They talk with a company that proposes just that, wanting to substitute a new system for the current model. From the article: "Profanity Sex Violence (PSV) Ratings differ from the ESRB in that they describe levels of sex, violence and profanity in games (using a traffic light system) instead of judging a game to be appropriate for a certain age."
Good Idea (Score:1)
Oh... and I know this isn't FRIST PSOT!!!!!
--Nick
Re:Good Idea (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Good Idea (Score:1)
Re:Good Idea (Score:1)
Re:Good Idea (Score:1)
Re:Good Idea (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Good Idea (Score:1)
But, since I'm a lonely slashdot geek, I have neither kids, no a wife/girlfriend/prostitute to produce kids with. So, it's a moot point.
--Nick
Re:Good Idea (Score:1)
Re:Good Idea (Score:1)
I'm one of the rare americans who likes more sex than violence. Oh and a bit of realistic conversation (read: Profanity) is good too.
Re:Good Idea (Score:4, Insightful)
(Almost) everyone likes sex. The people who whine about it just aren't getting any.
Re:Good Idea (Score:2)
This would put power into the hands of parents. Instead of saying "we watched this movie / played this game, and we think it's just fine for your kids," they would be saying "we watched this movie / played this game, here's what's in i
Re:Good Idea (Score:3, Insightful)
It goes beyond the moral argument of what it's "right" to consume for entertainment, and what is "wrong". We're never all going to agree on that. But that's not the only issue. The problem is, there have been no conclusive s
Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:RSAC (Score:3, Interesting)
More importantly he was able to understand this when he was five and he has never asked for an M game because he knows they are not for him. As a parent this is a huge feature, the ratings aren't just for adults.
Re:RSAC (Score:3, Insightful)
He understands that E games are for him and M games are not and that he can only play T games if we approve. (Star Craft & RoboTech).
But then there are misguided parents who prohibit a 12.5 year old from playing Super Smash Bros. Melee or Dance Dance Revolution Ultramix 2 just because it was rated T in an era when the E10+ rating did not exist, without taking the time to review the game in such a close case.
Re:RSAC (Score:2)
So? That's the parents' decision. Why should we care how they make it? Besides, if they can't even bother to think that their 12.5-year-old might be mature enough for a 13+ game, then they really don't want to bother w
Re:RSAC (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Why not movie ratings? (Score:4, Insightful)
PSV sounds like a workable concept, but it seems like the big trouble is that all of these video game ratings are reinventing the wheel. Little Billy Schmidt's Mom may not know an E rated game from an M, but she sure knows what an R rated movie is.
So roughly how many organizations would need massive payoffs in order to use the movie rating system for games?
Re: (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Why not movie ratings? (Score:2)
Re:Why not movie ratings? (Score:2)
So apparently this rating system can't distinguish between Minority Report and a Quentin Tarantino film. How useless.
Re:Why not movie ratings? (Score:3, Informative)
So apparently this rating system can't distinguish between Minority Report and a Quentin Tarantino film. How useless.
That's a big issue with this "proposal"; it's even more vague, arbitrary and uninformative than the current system. But here's another problem, for me anyway. From TFA:
"As far as I know, they use a few gamers that reside in New York. They are trying to follow the way that the NPAA does it in that they are very circumspect about who thei
Re:Why not movie ratings? (Score:3, Insightful)
Actually, I think he's worse than that. From other articles I've read, I think he's running a company, which is trying to get publishers and governments to license their brilliant idea of a ratings system.
Now granted, Red, Yellow, Green is certainly simpler than what we have - but they can't claim it's more powerful. From the article, "The Lion
Re:Why not movie ratings? (Score:2)
With a QT film, the "traffic lights" are simply shown riddled with bullet holes...
Re:Why not movie ratings? (Score:2)
But the 'R' rating is pretty useless by itself. For example, compare The Matrix with Kill Bill. Kill Bill is much higher on the graphic violence and profanity scales, but both got the same rating.
Sounds good... (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Sounds good... (Score:1)
Does a company own the G, PG etc. rating system, and they simply won't license
Re:Sounds good... (Score:2)
LOL! Yes we do; it's called PG-13 [wikipedia.org].
I'm laughing, because as a product of the 1980s, I distinctly remember the whole mess involving the creation of PG-13 after Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom showed that nifty heart extraction and immolation scene. We had a national Won't-Somebody-Please-Think-Of-The-Children scare and everything.
Sorry, buddy (Score:5, Insightful)
Second, he decries the ESRB system as being too vague. Yes, it would be useful to rate PSV separately. But, c'mon, Red/Yellow/Green as the ranking? What is that, None, Some, a Lot? Who gets to determine where the line is between yellow and red?
How about this: details on the cover. Ranking on a meaningful scale that at least gives us an fair idea of what's in the box.
No matter what, I'm going to make sure I'm aware of what games my kid is playing, and what's in those games. But I'd hate to shell out $60, bring the game home, watch the kid get all excited, and then realize that it's too mature for him. Take the game away, and then go back to the store to get a refund.
And, I'm sorry, but I don't have the time to research every game on the internet for half an hour... I'd rather spend that time interacting with my child.
Re:Sorry, buddy (Score:4, Insightful)
Take a look at this. [esrb.org]
We don't need a new system. We need people who understand and utilize the current system.
Re:Sorry, buddy (Score:2)
I'm sorry, "Sexual Themes," "Strong Sexual Content," and "Nudity" are the only descriptors for sex? They are too vague.
I'd prefer a scale. Because "Strong Sexual Content" can vary widely across games, and some I would consider appropriate for a 13-year-old, and some I would not.
Re:Sorry, buddy (Score:1)
I would not be too worried about Themes or Nudity but Content I think they could do with out. Do you have an example of "Strong Sexual Content" you would approve for a 13-year-old?
Re:Sorry, buddy (Score:1)
This is proposing going from an overall rating scaled over possible 6 age groups and 32 possible content descriptors (many of which are on a 3 tier scale) to 3 scales of red yellow and green on the box representing violence language and sex.
How is this giving you more informati
Re:Sorry, buddy (Score:2)
Detailed ratings are behind glass (Score:1)
which is why they say, right there under the rating, what it's rated for, just like under the rating for a movie.
Problem is that the detailed ratings for movies and games are on the back of the box, but at (for example) Target, Wal-Mart, and Meijer stores, game boxes are behind locked glass and cannot be rotated to read the detailed rating, unlike movie boxes.
Re:Detailed ratings are behind glass (Score:2)
Re:Detailed ratings are behind glass (Score:1)
Putting the rating label on the front of the box would be a good idea to elevate this problem.
Of course once you ask the employee to open the case for you, you can look at that back and tell them to put it back if you don't agree with the games content.
Another option is going to shop at EB, Gamestop or other game speci
Re:Detailed ratings are behind glass (Score:3, Funny)
Yes, but most good American parents would prefer not to actually touch a video game box, for fear it might instantly corrupt them. It's better to just ban them all and get kids back to playing with hula hoops or something.
How to fund? (Score:4, Insightful)
- Publishers pay: publishers pick the ratings they want to try to get, they pay to have their game (or movie, or music, or book, or painting, etc.) reviewed. The problem is the conflict of interest: if a rating board is seen as being 'nicer' to companies (per dollar) than others, they'll get the business, creating an incentive to be nicer.
- Customers pay: removes the conflict of interest to a good degree. The only way I see for this to happen is for third parties to publish a non-free 'guide' to games on the market, listing their ratings for each. These guides could be centralized and cross-referenced by yet another company, also as a non-free guide. Stores could carry the cost of such guides (buy them in bulk, have them available at the counter or on the shelves) and just include the price of the game-rating service into the price of the games they sell.
In either case, customers can vote with their purchase. If the games they're interested in don't care the certifications they think are good (that is, they've looked into the rules the rating boards use, and picked a few they think are fair), they don't buy the game. That at least creates a (slight) incentive for publishers to get their games rated by as many review boards as they can, whether it costs them or not.
Should there be a requirement to publish what rating was received, if the publisher disagrees with it? If the review board self-publishes, that could be a problem. If the publisher is the one doing it, it at least physically has the choice not to include the rating on the box. There's also a difference between asking the board for a particular rating and getting a yes/no answer, and just asking the board to assign a rating -- I think it affects how the requirement to publish would affect publishers' willingness to ask.
Note that all of this could be said of, say, FDA approval. Rather than having a government agency approve foods and drugs, customers could choose to trust (or not trust) each independent review board, and each manufacturer could choose to ask (or not ask) each review board to check their practices, or review boards could themselves decide to review products (particularly if self-published.) After all, shouldn't you be the one deciding whether or not you want to take the risk of using a particular drug or eating a particular food that you might be allergic to?
There are a lot of areas though where we're:
a) not willing to trust a multi-party system (but willing to trust a black-box single-party, governmental, system)
b) not willing to take the time to investigate each rating board, ask around to find out if they're actually reliable, whether or not their ratings seem satisfactory, whether or not there have been 'bad surprises'
But this works with most product reviews already -- no standard label on the box lists the quality of the game, the flavor of the meat, etc. There are, what, hundreds of game-review sites on the 'net, and people seem to pick a few they like and trust, but cross-reference them to avoid bias?
But hey, from a libertarian standpoint
Re:Sorry, buddy (Score:1)
Where do you live that the anticipated return trip to the store, and subsequent line at the customer service desk, is less than half an hour? I would waste at least that driving to/from the store, and usually end up being in line for 10 mins to talk to an employee.
Online research is a good thing. Many people can read a review, decide quickly (15-30 mins)
Re:Sorry, buddy (Score:2)
Also, I work in Manhattan. It's a short 2-block walk to the nearest game store.
Also, I'm not talking about games for me -- I'm talking about games for my kid.
Re:Sorry, buddy (Score:2)
My kid, however, will let me know that he wants the game -- I just need to determine whether I and my wife will agree that he can handle it.
Unfortunately, a couple of screenshots may not tell me enough about the context of the violence. And for questionable games, a single review usually doesn't give me enough information. So I'll end up checking IGN, Gamesp
Re:Sorry, buddy (Score:2)
Perhaps you're too busy to be a parent in the first place?
Re:Sorry, buddy (Score:2)
The ESRWho? (Score:5, Insightful)
Do people who complain about excessive violence in videogames actually have any idea who the ESRB is? Or how it works?
It's like Anime. Clueless people see Japanese Animation and think "It's a cartoon. It's for kids." Likewise, they take the same stereotypical view of videogames and come to the same completely incorrect conclusion. And then they complain that they bought a game for their kid that had decapitations, disembowlments, or a bare woman's ankle showing.
If we're going anywhere, it should be to simplify the system even more. Do you know what I mean when I say G? T? T+? What about 13? 17? 21? Cut down on the symbology and the choice, parents just want to know if a particular game is reasonably appropriate for a kid the age of theirs. Or not. One simple answer.
Re:The ESRWho? (Score:2)
Re:shut the fuck up, really (Score:2)
GENIUS!!! (Score:2)
And your conspiracy theory nonsense about EA being involved with selling porn to minors, possibly even child porn(yes, folks, scan back through his posts to find the reference, if you feel so inclined) gro
Re:GENIUS!!! (Score:2)
Re:GENIUS!!! (Score:2)
I wish they could be bought: it would help keep publishers from overreacting to the oddest things when creating games. "No the character can't shoot milk out of their nose when laughing in the cafeteria scene. What would
Re:GENIUS!!! (Score:2)
Re:GENIUS!!! (Score:2)
and they don't do anything to stop the people who are selling pornographic mods to their game,
Who, exactly, is selling pornographic mods? And how exactly would EA have the power to stop them if someone were?
Re:GENIUS!!! (Score:2)
Re:GENIUS!!! (Score:2)
I'm not going to link to porn sites on Slashdot. Go google.
Yeah, because Slashdot is just a bastion of wholesomeness and light, right? I did google it. Which is why I was asking. I found lots of people talking about making a porn mod or wishing there was one, but no links to any actual porn mod, let alone one that was for sale. So again, is someone actually selling one, or are you talking out of your ass?
Re:GENIUS!!! (Score:2)
So you say that people are selling mods for the game? And you also claim and seems to know that those selling it (shop? person) for some strange reason has also agreed to that specific EULA? If not, they can't violate it to start with, and shops for example tend to not go arround agreeing to EULAs just for fun.
>They also happen to be advertising these mods by using The Sims
>trademark.
So? Using a trademark is not nessecarilly a trademark infringement.
Re:GENIUS!!! (Score:2)
You're probably the first, but I'll respect that.
How would they stop them? Uhhh, it's a violation of the EULA to sell mods.
Considering that EA releases tools [ea.com] directly to do modding on The Sims, I highly doubt it against the EULA to make mods. There may be some argument about selling them, but that would be near impossible to enforce, and probably tossed out in court very quickly. Besides which, most of the "nude" mods are released for free.
They al
Re:GENIUS!!! (Score:2)
Thats right, because when I walk into a 7-11 the only items in the store that doesn't have sales tax are their copies of Playboy.
failed to defend their trademark
From what? Did someone make a game and call it "the sims" while I was asleep last night?
Re:GENIUS!!! (Score:2)
How? Please, enlighten us. Should EA cripple their games to prevent people from extending them in new and cool ways because someone might make "clothes" for the characters that make them look naked?
Or should EA add a "magical nudity detector" that would automatically scan every module looking for things that look naked?
Maybe you'd personally volunteer to spend 16 hours a day with the rest of their programmers to manually check every single
Re:shut the fuck up, really (Score:2)
Re:The ESRWho? (Score:2)
No, good parents want to know if a game is suitable for the maturity level of their child. Not a child of the same age, but specifically, their child.
Yes, symbology gets in the way of this. But a blanket "13" does no good. Detail. A listing of the questionable content and the frequency it appears in-game. Then I can decide if my
Re:The ESRWho? (Score:1)
But a blanket "13" does no good. Detail. A listing of the questionable content and the frequency it appears in-game.
ESRB ratings already include detail on the back of the box. I guess you just want the detailed rating moved to the front of the box where it would become visible without having to track down a sales associate to unlock the glass display case.
Re:The ESRWho? (Score:2)
Re:The ESRWho? (Score:2)
Bad parents need instant ratings.
Re:The ESRWho? (Score:2)
But would good parents allow their child to spend 50 hours playing a video game? That's more than 7 weeks of playing a game EVERY DAY for an hour.
I work. I commute. I coach sports teams that my child is on. I do housework and yardwork. I pay bills and track household expenses. I cook dinner half the time. Every month or so, I even get t
Fair's Fair? (Score:2)
So when do Movies get their own independant system like this? If we "need" one for games and TV already has (a detailed) one, when do the movies get their own version of this? Although, does anyone know if the TV reviews are actually independant or by the producers/networks?
Re:Fair's Fair? (Score:1)
It was established by the Federal Communications Commission but, unlike the MPAA film rating system, only as a voluntary-participation system with ratings to be determined by the individually participating broadcast and cable networks. [wikipedia.org]
ESRB has PSV info (Score:5, Insightful)
No. (Score:1, Interesting)
Did I miss something? Was faith ever lost in the ESRB? The ESRB didn't create the "hot coffee" mod, and last I knew they were quite capable of rating a game "M for mature" if it contained sex or violence.
The only thing that "Hot Coffee" made me loose a little more faith in are parents who refuse to care what they buy their children - or talking heads screaming about how videogames are apparently murdering babies in their sleep.
instead of judging a
Re:No. (Score:3, Insightful)
Boy, I don't know what this 'M' means, and I don't really want to squint to read the text under it.
Oh well, I guess, since I don't know what this rating means, I'd better just blindly buy Timmy this game."
You don't let your kid watch "The Ring". You don't let your kid play "Gran
Re:No. (Score:2)
it's already done. (Score:5, Insightful)
Oh yeah they are already doing that, Right next to the one letter ESRB rating. Here let me give you a few examples:
Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas
Mature (17+)
Blood and Gore,
Intense Violence,
Strong Language,
Strong Sexual Content,
Use of Drugs
The Sims 2
Teen (13+)
Crude Humor,
Sexual Themes,
Violence
Halo 2
Mature (17+)
Blood and Gore,
Violence
God of War
Mature (17+)
Blood and Gore,
Intense Violence,
Nudity,
Sexual Themes
Strong Language
This really seems like an example of people not paying attention to the rating labels. The extra description for what the title contains has been on games for a very long time now. If you want to know what is in the game read a little more then the big single letter in the rating box. Also each of these extra descriptors are already rated. That's the difference between some violence, violence, and intense violence.
This stoplight rating system seems like it would be a step in the wrong direction. It would end up giving you less information.
Locked glass door (Score:1)
But in too many stores, all that a parent can see is "EA Games The Sims 2 for PlayStation 2, rated Teen (13+)" because "Crude Humor, Sexual Themes, Violence" is on the back of the box, which is behind a locked glass door.
what if (Score:2)
THINK OF THE MOTHER FUCKING CHILDREN!! IF YOU'RE NOT WITH US, YOU ARE IS WIT H THE MOLEST!!!
Re:it's already done. (Score:2)
Oh yeah they are already doing that, Right next to the one letter ESRB rating. Here let me give you a few examples:
[snip]
This stoplight rating system seems like it would be a step in the wrong direction. It would end up giving you less information.
Similar things are now included on movie ra
Huh???? (Score:1, Redundant)
It's an exercise in futility. The only way to get rid of the ESRB (or render them useless) is to have governmental regulations. Good luck defeating the video game industry's lobby. Other independent groups can put out their own ratings, but good luck trying to get those ratings onto game boxes.
While we are at it, let's ask the MPAA to step down. (Honestly, I wish the MPAA was el
A better solution (Score:4, Funny)
For, say, Grand Theft Auto, the game would ship with a giant red light (the size of your head) that flashes like a strobe light. An airhorn, much like those used on a tug boat, will sound when the game is picked up. That way, parents can know - "Hey, warning! I should pay attention to this!"
Obviously we can't trust parents to see the big letter M on the front or take note of either the game's title or graphics on the box. Parents must just be picking up these boxes and staring straight ahead when they throw them on the counter. My solution of enormous siren/light combo will clearly inform parents and at a minimal cost of $5-25 per box.
Nice If they considered... (Score:1)
A video game containing but not allowing access to nudity (GTA) is switched to adult cause of some boobs and therefore EVERYONE BANS ITS SALE until there is a new version. So apparently the british can see tits on TV but we can't allow a 17+ mature
Re:Nice If they considered... (Score:2)
That game allegedly had parental lock - there were also locked versions sold at WalMart and Australia.
There was also a parental lock option available, meant to satisify complaints (but interfered with gameplay: the affected items were invisible b
PSV? (Score:2)
Next thing you know we'll be listening to nothing but commercial jingles on the radio and eating at Taco Bell.
Good idea (Score:2)
That way, parents would get a better idea by just comparin
Just a minute... (Score:2, Interesting)
For all I try I simply can't remember anything close to sex in that film. They had nude female bodies, yes, but they were lying in a pool hooked up to machinery. Only someone who's totally perverted anyway would even think the word "sex" upon seeing the Precog's Temple. Other than that, I don't even recall a kissing scene.
Let's not hand these people our video games until they can get their damned facts stra
Re:Just a minute... (Score:2)
Traffic Light good, ESRB better. (Score:2)
They believe Hot Coffee is horrendous and all. The fact is that code was NOT available in the retail package, a mod had to be used for it. There's about a million mods for Morrowind, each one can change the experience up from making it more mild, to making it M (the "real body" setup for instance adds nudity... There is a cat fighting mod, and others) This doesn't change the original rating of the game and it shouldn't! ESRB understand
All sex/violence not created equal (Score:3, Insightful)
Some examples from other forms of entertainment:
Will the biases of the review board come out? I saw one television show that claimed to have "strong sexual content" and the only sexual content was two men kissing - and yet I've never seen *any* kind of "sexual content" warning, strong or otherwise, on shows where the equivalent (and more, really) heterosexual behavior is taking place.
What about with violence? "The Passion of the Christ" was basically just a snuff film to anyone who isn't Christian, and yet, because it was Jesus in there, it's okay. And then compare that to any run of the mill kill fest flick, and see how people complain about the violence, even though it's so much less than the torture doled out on screen in TPotC.
What about stuff like the South Park movie? Originally it was going to be given some absurd rating because of a few things - like the original title was "South Park: All Hell Breaks Loose" which got changed to the (somehow less "adult") title of Bigger, Longer and Uncut (which is only less adult if you're a fucking moron). In the "making of" extras, the creators were joking about how they took every complaint the ratings people had, made it 10x dirtier but *slightly* more subtle, and put it back in... And eventually got a lower rating because, basically, the board didn't get the jokes. (Not that I mind - I'm glad it had as wide an audience as possible because I do think the message was one worth spreading)
To me, I think it is enough to say "Sex, Violence, Drugs" or whatever and leave it at that. Trying to rank what's "worse" - consensual anal sex onscreen or obscured non consensual sex - eating another human being or hundreds of people being blown up in a battle on a beach - two men kissing, or a straight couple doing everything but fucking on-screen - is best left up to the individual.
This board thing is purely a political move. People are trying to show that they're doing something, even if that something is just a waste of time. The old ratings system was fine - just like any system, it didn't deal with people trying to get around it in unforseen ways.
Why not adopt the movie system? (Score:2)
The "Jack Thompson" scheme (Score:3, Funny)
For instance, Grand Theft Auto would be rated "CK" for Cop Killer.
Sims 2 would simply be rated "P" for Pedophile.
Seeing how Doom 3 is a murder simulator, it would obviously get an "M" rating.
Lego Starwars would be rated "W" for Whore. Why? Well because P for Prostitute was already taken!
Re:The "Jack Thompson" scheme (Score:2)
In this game, most of the scenes in Episodes 2-3 are fatal unless you manage to kill the bandit on the one and only exact frame - usually, from the device that was used to try to kill the bandit.
I suggest the letter 'S' - although it will be confused with "Super" in the same way 'M' gets confused with "Masterful".
Re:Yeah, like it will change anything (Score:1)
What's the difference here? Oh right, it's illegal for a parent to give a copy of Hustler to a 7-year-old child. It's also illegal for a store to sell it to a 7-year-old child. Unlike most states in the US where there is no law to prevent 7-year-old children from entering a store and buying a copy of GTA3 without their parent's k
Re:Yeah, like it will change anything (Score:2)
Re:Yeah, like it will change anything (Score:2)
Re:Yeah, like it will change anything (Score:1)
Is the rating system a law?
No, the rating system is strictly voluntary and carries no force of law
and
Who enforces the ratings? While the decision to enforce the rating system is purely voluntary, the National Association of Theatre Owners estimate that the majority of theaters observe the Classification and Rating Administration's guidelines
Sounds pretty clear to me that the ratings are not enforced by law in any way. This includes the actual rating
Re:Yeah, like it will change anything (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Yeah, like it will change anything (Score:1)
Re:Yeah, like it will change anything (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Yeah, like it will change anything (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Yeah, like it will change anything (Score:3, Interesting)
Comment removed (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Yeah, like it will change anything (Score:2)
As far as I know, there's nothing of the sort.