Want to read Slashdot from your mobile device? Point it at m.slashdot.org and keep reading!

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Censorship Australia Government Games

In 6 Months, Australia Bans More Than 240 Games 136

dotarray writes with this snippet from (apropos) Player Attack: In the 20 years from 1995 to January 2015, there were 77 games Refused Classification in Australia. After January though, more than 240 games have been effectively banned by the Classification Board — an average of 40 per month. Most of these games are mobile- or digital-only releases you're unlikely to have ever heard of, with names like League Of Guessing, 'w21wdf AB test,' Sniper 3D Assault Zombie, Measure Bra Size Prank, and Virtual Marijuana Smoking showing up in just the first few pages. What games are banned in your country?
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

In 6 Months, Australia Bans More Than 240 Games

Comments Filter:
  • by Revek ( 133289 ) on Sunday June 21, 2015 @04:36PM (#49958113)

    Just imagine all those games get that free advertising. "Banned in Australia" could become the new measure of how cool a game is.

    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • by Anonymous Coward

      Why not, it worked for grand theft auto.

    • It used to be that no classification of R18 existed for games. So an R18 game like GTA got "refused classification" since it couldn't be given any of the existing lower classifications (MA15 was the highest). There was an interesting political story behind this, since a change in classification rules required unanimous agreement from all 6 states, one State's Attorney General simply refused to discuss the matter saying he didn't want it. The entire country had to wait for him to finally retire before the ne
  • by OzPeter ( 195038 ) on Sunday June 21, 2015 @04:50PM (#49958169)

    From TFA

    While this current trial will only last 12 months initially ...

    So the Oz government has signed up with a global, unified ratings system from the IARC [globalratings.com]. And all that is required from the game publishes is to submit answers to a bunch of questions to set a ratings level for their game. For free.

    Sure, the OZ government has probably tailored how the answers to the question map into the desired Australian ratings system, but this sounds like a great step forward with consistency and transparency. Also from TFA

    It's worth noting that the IARC has also submitted plenty of games which have been accepted by the Classification Board - we're still figuring out the exact number, but there are hundreds of digital/mobile only games classified R18+, MA15+, M, PG and G which have passed through the IARC process.

  • The game Mino is banned in the U.S. because a district court ruled three years ago that The Tetris Company owns the exclusive right to make falling block video games using the seven one-sided tetrominoes. Tetris v. Xio [slashdot.org]. And I expect an eventual lawsuit against the Free Software Foundation over M-x tetris in GNU Emacs because Tetris co-founder Alexey Pajitnov believes that free software "should never have existed" because it "destroys the market" [slashdot.org].

    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      by Anonymous Coward

      To be fair, Xio duplicated the game's color selection for the pieces, the rotation mechanics (there are many variants of how to rotate pieces in a tetromino game), the drop slide mechanic, etc. It was as close to a copy they could make without duplicating assets. The courts did not rule that no one else could make a tetromino game, just that Xio tried to duplicate Tetris.

      I've made several block dropping games, and there were fudsters incensed by sensational media claims all over the place at the time of th

      • by tepples ( 727027 )

        Anonymous Coward wrote:

        To be fair, Xio duplicated the game's color selection for the pieces

        That's as if someone had a copyright on green means go and red means stop, or if the NBA sued the NCAA and high school leagues for using an orange ball.

        the rotation mechanics (there are many variants of how to rotate pieces in a tetromino game)

        Are you referring to the SRS wall kicks? In 2009, a Tetris licensee used the DMCA to take down YouTube videos of fan games using the simpler center-right-left kick mechanic used in games like Dr. Mario and Puyo Puyo.

        the drop slide mechanic

        Are you referring to the "infinite spin" mechanic? In 2009, a Tetris licensee used the DMCA to take down YouTube videos o

  • by turkeydance ( 1266624 ) on Sunday June 21, 2015 @04:56PM (#49958197)
    cock fighting, bear baiting, and tackle football (NFL doesn't like it, anymore).
    • If cock fighting video games were banned, Nintendo and its fans would be up in arms, and the mainstream news media would have run a story about a country where kids are forbidden to spend their POcKEt MONey on a video game that has been rated "Everyone (Comic Mischief, Mild Cartoon Violence)" by the U.S.-based ESRB.

      • by dbIII ( 701233 )
        Are you suggesting that pocket monsters are cocks?
        Now that I think about it, there's a reason they shortened the name a bit so that it's acceptable to play with your pocket monster in public.
    • by Uberbah ( 647458 )

      tackle football (NFL doesn't like it, anymore).

      Miss the days of players deliberately making helmet-to-helmet tackles without penalty? If you want to have the brain of an 80 year old Alzheimer's patient before you can run for the Senate, go volunteer yourself, Sparky.

      • I don't expect them to get the big bucks without risk.

      • by Nidi62 ( 1525137 )

        tackle football (NFL doesn't like it, anymore).

        Miss the days of players deliberately making helmet-to-helmet tackles without penalty? If you want to have the brain of an 80 year old Alzheimer's patient before you can run for the Senate, go volunteer yourself, Sparky.

        I miss the days where a player would be taught to break down, plant their facemask in their opponents chest,wrap up, and drive through. No shattered knees, no concussions. Now their idea of tackling is dropping their heads and launching themselves at people's knees.

  • I read about this and I'm really glad I don't live in Australia right now. America still has SOME freedom left although it is rapidly dwindling.
    • Re:My 0.02 (Score:4, Informative)

      by OzPeter ( 195038 ) on Sunday June 21, 2015 @05:05PM (#49958243)

      I read about this and I'm really glad I don't live in Australia right now. America still has SOME freedom left although it is rapidly dwindling.

      Read TFA .. the ESRB has signed up to the same service as Australia and both Goole Play and Firefox Marketplace support the IARC.

  • What games are banned in your company

    They play "Pump Kin" in Arkansas, pretty sure it's illegal though...

  • Mortal Monday (Score:3, Informative)

    by Spy Handler ( 822350 ) on Sunday June 21, 2015 @05:04PM (#49958225) Homepage Journal

    Mortal Kombat was banned simultaneously in Australia, Germany, U.K. and several other countries on what became known as Mortal Monday, 1993.

    Fatality!

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      Mortal Kombat was never banned in the UK. "Mortal Monday" was the name of the simultaneous multi-platform launch day.

  • Thank you for sharing
  • Capitalism (Score:2, Insightful)

    by Pharmboy ( 216950 )

    It has been banned for all but the very rich, thanks to a wave of new regulations. 90 percent, yes 90 percent of my industry is gone and we are paring back.

    Capitalism used to be a fun game to play in America.

  • Anything Apple won't publish is essentially banned.

    • by tepples ( 727027 )

      Similarly, there are things Microsoft, Nintendo, and Sony won't approve for use on retail consoles. The Binding of Isaac is among them.

      • /me shakes head.

        You're doing that thing again where you assume that because something was true at one time or for one particular group, that it is still true. Your hyperfocus and obsession with how you percieve indies being disregarded by Sony/Microsoft/Nintendo, seems to stop you from updating your knowledge. In other words, Where have YOU been?

        https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

        https://store.playstation.com/... [playstation.com]

        • by tepples ( 727027 )

          Some games are rejected by Nintendo and approved by Sony. Your first link states that Nintendo rejected The Binding of Isaac for 3DS. But other games are rejected by Sony and Microsoft, such as Manhunt 2.

          • But other games are rejected by Sony and Microsoft, such as Manhunt 2.

            Tepples, why the heck do you keep stating such outdated and incorrect info? I know you have your axe against the console makers because they don't just hand out devkits and whatnot to every "garage developer" with a dream, but that's no excuse for getting facts wrong or exaggerating the facts to grind your axe against the console makers.

            https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

            Platform(s) Microsoft Windows, PlayStation 2, PlayStation Portable, Wii

            https://store.playstation.com/... [playstation.com]

            The rejection was more "nuanced

            • Tepples, why the heck do you keep stating such outdated and incorrect info?

              Because I have not been made aware that a particular piece of information has since become outdated and incorrect. Would it be more proper to phrase all such anecdotes in the past tense, citing a particular article that was published in a particular month and year?

              "garage developer"

              Which I did not mention at all.

              • Because I have not been made aware that a particular piece of information has since become outdated and incorrect.

                Don't you think it's your responsibility to make sure your facts are correct BEFORE you post things like that? And considering that Manhunt 2 was released 8 YEARS AGO, you'd think that you'd have paid attention to what had actually happened considering you remembered the initial refusal.

                Would it be more proper to phrase all such anecdotes in the past tense, citing a particular article that was published in a particular month and year?

                It would be more "proper" and a "best practice" to check your anecdotes for accuracy yourself. You've got google, use it.

                Which I did not mention at all.

                You didn't need to. I figure most frequent commenters know of your grudge.

  • Australia has been ban happy with games for years.

  • An unusual and surprising spike in video game piracy has been noticed in Australia.
  • In Poland playing poker tournament without valid license is illegal. Online poker is also illegal. I am not joking. People here are so brainwashed by Civic Platform that they still consider this party "liberal".

  • I shit you not.
    In fact, it was the first game that was banned for minors. Not anymore, though.

  • In 6 Months, Australia Bans More Than 240 Games

    I knew something weird happens when you cross the international dateline, but I didn't realise it could send news back in time by half a year.

  • In my country, the most recently banned game is called "Leaking information of Private Contractors work on Government Surveillance Network installed to Spy on Ordinary Citizens."
  • What the heck...

    In Soviet Russia, video games ban government!

    Ok, that really doesn't make any sense.

Do molecular biologists wear designer genes?

Working...