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Grand Theft Auto Still Banned Down Under

SicariusMan sent us a CNN story that talks about australia upholding the ban on GTA3. It's been mentioned here before, but its interesting that its gonna stick. GTA3 really is perhaps the best PS2 game out in recent memory. I'm having a PS2 resurgance of late, beating Klonoa2, MGS2, Baldur's Gate: Dark Alliance, and getting hooked on Jak and Daxter and Frequency. And GTA3 is easily among the best of PS2 games. Sorry .au! At least they probably won't ban FFX!

32 of 421 comments (clear)

  1. What? by OblongPlatypus · · Score: 5, Funny

    Am I to understand that stealing cars is illegal in Australia? How... weird.

    --
    -- If no truths are spoken then no lies can hide --
    1. Re:What? by AugstWest · · Score: 5, Funny

      I tell you what, tho....

      I was speeding down the interstate the other night, passing people on the right, when i spotted a speed trap too late. I saw the cop's lights go on, and watched him looking for a space to pull onto the highway to pull me over.

      I jumped into the middle lane, then the right lane, hid behind a trailer truck, then shot off the offramp, and wandered off and hid.

      At that point, I realized I'd been playing WAY too much GTA3. It was my first reaction.

    2. Re:What? by Erasmus+Darwin · · Score: 3, Insightful
      "Are you implying by playing GTA people will be encouraged to steal cars?"

      No. Read the article headline. "Grand Theft Auto Still Banned Down Under." The previous poster was making a joke by delibrately choosing to confuse the name of the video game "Grand Theft Auto" with the name of the actual crime "Grand Theft Auto". The joke utilizes the confusion to paint the absurd image of a news headline about the banning of something that's widely accepted as an outright criminal offense -- unlike, say, P2P filesharing, guns, or abortion, you don't have people arguing over whether or not the government should try to stop it.

  2. Gov'mint knows best by Sobrique · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This is what we like to see.
    Governments protecting us from playing things that are naughty.
    Thought police strike again. Anyone think that .au has seen the draconian legislation that the US and the EU have started trying to bring about and want to join in the party?

    Well, as long as you can still buy pr0n, I guess that's ok :)

  3. Wrong side of the road. by billnad · · Score: 5, Funny

    I believe that I can clear this up. Any single video game can integrate itself into a countrys culture. Perhaps the Aussie authoritys are worried that this will cause people to drive on the "wrong" side of the road

    1. Re:Wrong side of the road. by oddjob · · Score: 5, Funny

      You drive on the road in GTA3? I much prefer the sidewalk.

  4. Odd thing to complain about. by Kanon · · Score: 5, Funny

    I remember from the earlier article that Australia was concerned about being able to hire prostitutes. Do your thing and then beat them up for the money.

    It's probably a good thing they didn't realise you can wander around, beat someone up for their money, kill the paramedic when he arrives, steal the ambulance and then mow down prostitutes by the dozen. All in the privacy of your own home!

    1. Re:Odd thing to complain about. by mekkab · · Score: 5, Funny

      So I sez to my wife "Wife, this game is great! You pick up prostitutes, have them 'do there thing', and then beat 'em up to get your money back!"

      So she sez "okay, show me!"

      So I do... and to say the least she was rather unimpressed. Millions of polygons, more ram, more space on the dvd-roms, and a creaky car is the best they could come up with?

      Wife was not offended. THIS GAME SUCKS!

      --
      In the future, I would want to not be isolated from my friends in the Space Station.
  5. Are Aussies expected to return the game? by Dimensio · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Consider this from the CNN article (And I've seen it before):

    The OFLC was firm on the point that the game would not allowed in Australia, saying "if you have already purchased a game you will need to contact your retailer about return procedures."

    Are people who purchased the game before the ban now expected to return it? Exactly how many Aussies are going to return what is essentially a collector's item in their country?

  6. I'd be more sympathetic... by Byteme · · Score: 3, Funny
    ...if Australia didn't export beer that has already been through the kidney!

    1. Re:I'd be more sympathetic... by Howie · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Assuming you live where your whois records say, you aren't qualified to comment on other nation's beer output, I'm afraid ;-)

      --
      "don't fall into the fallacy of believing that Perl can solve social problems. Maybe Perl 6 can, but that's a ways off"
  7. It's not really that bad by rnb · · Score: 3, Informative

    After having played GTA3 for many hours straight, I'm surprised to hear of this (I missed the original article.) Sure, there's some swearing and violence, but it's not really any worse than a lot of other games that are already readily available. Does Australia have a long list of games that are banned, or is this one being set up to make an example, so to speak?

    1. Re:It's not really that bad by kilgore_47 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Yes, you can pick up a prostitute. Yes, you can kill (and rob) her or anyone else. Yes, if you push R2-R2-L1-R2-Left-Down-Right-Up-Left-Down-Right-Up you'll get every weapon possible, including a rocket launcher you can use to take down the police helicopter(s) that will eventually arrive. Yes, you can light people on fire with a flamethrower. Yes, when the national guard comes it is possible to steal their tank and drive around the city crushing things.

      By the fact that the game is selling, it's pretty clear that people WANT to play this kind of game. The government is supposedly there to serve the people (according to Jefferson, governments are created to protect our inalienable rights). How does taking something away serve them? The few people who are unable to tell a game from reality, and who go on GTA-style killing sprees in the real world as a result of this game, are probably lunatics anyway who would've eventually snapped anyway. Why shouldn't I (and my reality-and-games distinguishing friends) be allowed to play this game now?

      A side note, however: Lets not just focus on .AU here; this game was pulled from stores in America too and it's only back now because they've been forced to tone it down a bit.

      --
      ___
      The way to see by faith is to shut the eye of reason. --Ben Franklin
    2. Re:It's not really that bad by ZaMoose · · Score: 4, Funny

      Re: open-endedness. Why not ban the Sims too? I mean, I can wall people in in my bathroom and chuckle gleefully over their cries for help as they slowly starve to death.

      Or pause the game when a Sim is swimming, remove the ladder from the pool and then watch as they tire and drown.

      Seems to me that this sort of mayhem is much more within the reach of the average consumer (vs. obtaining rocket-propelled grenades and high-powered sniper rifles).

      --
      I wish I had a kryptonite cross, because then you could keep Dracula and Superman away.
  8. Interesting Cycle... by Uttles · · Score: 5, Funny

    I mean isn't Australia just a big island full of convicts? Funny how now they seem to be so strict. I wonder if someone gets arrested for having that game, are they going to ship them to the UK?

    --

    ~ now you know
  9. Support your Aussie gamer! by LordNimon · · Score: 3, Informative

    If anyone has any friends in Australia, I recommend that you ask them if they want a copy of GTA3. If so, you should offer to buy it and mail it to them. With the surge of Christmas packages, I doubt Customs would search every package, especially if it were sent in an innocent-looking envelope.

    --
    And the men who hold high places must be the ones who start
    To mold a new reality... closer to the heart
    1. Re:Support your Aussie gamer! by nocent · · Score: 3, Funny
      If anyone has any friends in Australia, I recommend that you ask them if they want a copy of GTA3. If so, you should offer to buy it and mail it to them. With the surge of Christmas packages, I doubt Customs would search every package, especially if it were sent in an innocent-looking envelope.

      You should buy them a new PS2 too while you're at it. Region coding for PS2 games means that they won't be able to play your US GTA3 on their Australian PS2.

  10. The best and Worst Game this year! by Quizme2000 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Ture the gamplay and replay value are pretty damn good, even a descent storyline. But, copkilling games and those with other criminal content will always attract publicity and bans. Remember "Postal". It was the same thing, at the time it had great graphics and a high replay value (especially the marching band level). Anyway, don't think for a second that this will be a negitive for the game publisher, its just an added plus to help sell the game in the US and UK. Hey, I played through GTA, Max Payne, and Spycraft. I can't say that I'm a better person for playing them. I would never want my child to come in contact with that shit just for someone else's entertainment.

    --
    "Get them before they get....
    1. Re:The best and Worst Game this year! by el_nino · · Score: 4, Insightful
      I would never want my child to come in contact with that shit just for someone else's entertainment.

      Er... Just for whom's entertainment do you play games for? I play them for my own entertainment, and I'd imagine your child would do the same.

  11. Memories by Mac+Nazgul · · Score: 3, Insightful

    of Carmageddon spring to mind...

    Why does it seem automobile related destruction of life and limb garners so much censorship?
    We kill 50,000+ people a year on the streets as it is!

    For those who have seen the classic Sean Connery James Bond film "Goldfinger" there is a quote I always found amusing...

    JB: Incidently, Delta-9 nerve gas is fatal- you'll kill 45,000 people.
    GF: Ha! American motorists kill that many every 2 years!"

    Now we hit that mark in under a year...

  12. They *mean* well, but... by b.foster · · Score: 3, Interesting
    I'd just like to start out by saying that banning a freakin video game is not going to solve the world's problems, and is completely absurd.

    However, I do see where their government is going with this. It has been a disturbing trend for several decades in this country that criminals feed on the public's attention, and when the public gives much attention to criminals, it encourages people with self esteem issues to become criminals.

    That, then, is the problem with GTA: it encourages car theft. Not in the sense that a GTA player is likely to go out and steal a car, but rather that it allows a culture to slip steadily closer to a hellish society in which crime is tolerated in order to entertain the public. This is not unlike the Colosseum in ancient Rome, in which murders took place between god-fearing christians for the sake of the public's amusement. Compare this to the instant notoriety of serial killers like John Wayne Gacy, who make a killing selling paintings from prison, and you can see why the government wants to stop glorifying crime now.

    Something must be done about this morbid situation. But it doesn't involve banning games. Perhaps it is a media problem; if the government owned a few media outlets, it would be able to put writers and producers with old fashioned values back on the TV, replacing the ratings whores we have today. That is a bit closer to socialism than we should be, but it might be better for society in the long run.

    Bill

  13. Steering Wheel wrong side... by toupsie · · Score: 5, Funny
    All they need to do is move the steering wheel from the left side of the car to the right side of the car and mirror all the scenes so players are driving on the correct side of the road in Australia. This is completely understandable. The last thing the nation of Australia needs is a bunch of teens taught to drive on the wrong side of the road.

    On a serious note, I lived in Australia (Newtown, NSW) in 1992 for about 7 months. When watching TV, I started to notice you really didn't see violence but man 'o man did you see breasts! While I was there, the movie "Ten" w/ Bo Derek was shown on their equivilent of NBC. In America, they cut out all the nudity scenes. In Australia, they actually had more than the original movie had! Special Director's Cut for Australia. What a great country! Great beer, beautiful women and those cool, lickable toads.

    --
    Strange women lying in ponds distributing swords is no basis for a system of government.
  14. Secret code for GTA3 by Hougaard · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Ofcause they need to ban a game where you can do the following:

    Urinate:
    Walk up to a wall and press Up, Down, Up, Down, L2, R1, R2(2), Up, Down, Up, Down, Up.
    Your character will urinate on the wall. The cops will chase since it counts as vandalizing.

    Funny!

  15. From a known fellon: by cavemanf16 · · Score: 5, Funny
    Hello slashdot!

    I found that GTA and GTA2, while not as graphically pleasing as GTA3 looks to be, were a wonderful addition to my skill set. Not only do I now know how to go on a "Kiiiiillll FRENZY!", but I also know how to hotwire most major makes of car, from the unimposing Ford Fiesta, to the ever-popular Tank!

    These sorts of skills are very important to an aspiring criminal mastermind, such as me. And why work so hard for a Cisco or MSCE certification? They cost so much more! For only $49.95 (before tax), you too can learn the same skill sets I now have.

    I'm just wondering if GTA3, with all it's new-fangled '3D' graphics is really worth the investment in my future. I mean, I already know how to highjack cars and kill random people. Do I really need to know how to interact with the mob? Please help me decide slashdot!

  16. Bad logic by Peter+Dyck · · Score: 3, Insightful
    "First they ban the guns. Then it's open season on everyone and everything."

    Oh you mean like in Europe and practically in every other western democracy?

    Besides that's a "Slippery Slope" logical fallacy.

  17. UK "Bans" Clockwork Orange, USA "Bans" , others by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

    USA and UK ban stuff too, not just australia. Its just that its gov pressure on publishers that does it rather than pre-emptive laws.

    The Playstation had an awesome game I played a lot using a MOD chip called Thrill Kill.

    Unfortunately for the developers and fans, before that game was released Electronic Arts acquired the rights to the game by purchasing Virgin Interactive's titles, and due to the publisher's "moral obligations," the game never saw the light of day. At least, legitimately. Ebay sales of Illegal CDRs were heavy for a while. and it traded swiftly , especially after EA placed full size ads for it in trade mags, and stickers.

    And dont forget that the Movie Clockwork Orange was not played in Britain for almost 20 years in a theater! Kubrick was threatened with jail time if he allowed it by threatening to assosiate teen crime with him as the inciting party.

    The USA almost banned "Custers Last Stand" for the Atari 2600, which featured a cowboy raping a Squaw tied to a stake.

    Germany successfully banned Castle Wolfenstein 3D by ID when Compuserve tried to have it online. It got deleted off CIS.

    Australia is screwed in other ways regarding porn though.

    At least in the US I can say "Jesus is a Lie" in a video game, or depict cops having their heads blown off to score extra points.

  18. Why this doesn't immediately bother me... by wrinkledshirt · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Okay, what you have is a society whose government has decided that it doesn't want video games that make carjacking and other violent mayhem seem like a fun idea.

    From a moral standpoint, that's actually kind of healthy.

    Where it starts to get iffy is when this sort of ban is actually symptomatic of a bigger problem, in which the government is trying to make their entire population goosestep and a commercial ban on violent games is only one such restriction imposed, in parallel with other restrictions like clampdowns on information or restricted free political speech.

    For instance, if the US were to ban counterstrike servers that didn't automatically put bots on the terrorist team, I'd be pretty freaked out. And you can bet this is something that will come further down the line if Ashcroft et al. don't get their powers checked.

    But I've never heard of Australia being a society with a reputation of doing this sort of thing to its population. Now, I'm not saying that this isn't happening there per se, I may just be ignorant of it, and an Aussie contribution on this issue would definitely be valuable.

    But what I'm thinking is that we shouldn't necessarily be taking this in the same vein as if a North American government were imposing such a restriction. You might disagree, but I think that the censorship is only a problem when it comes close to stifling dissent against the powers that be, as opposed to just trying to promote a little bit of morality and decency. Yes, I know that the line is easily blurred, but is it blurred here?

    Just my two cents.

    --

    --------
    Bleah! Heh heh heh... BLEAH BLEAH!!! Ha ha ha ha...

  19. New Autralian version to come in Jan 2002 by substruo · · Score: 4, Funny

    The article says that the maker of the game is trying to make a new version of the game for distribution in Australia in Jan 2002.

    How are they gonna pull that off??? Remove the guns, prostituts, organized crime, etc.... what are you left with??? Crazy Taxi????

  20. Re:Boycott Australia by Xenex · · Score: 5, Informative

    "We should all (I mean, the Western World) boycott Australia for all the censorship and banning."

    Now, should I make a comment about how the (stereo)typical American that knows nothing about the rest of the world, or point out that Australia is generally considered as part of the west, at least in a political sense?

    "I mean, how many millions of dollars do we leave there through tourism? If we stopped going, then they would feel a drop in their income."

    Do you really think that international tourism hasn't dropped already? This little thing happened, something to do with planes. About 3 months ago. You may have heard about it on the TV.

    Besides, tourism may be a large industry, but it's hardly the be all and end all. And since September 11, domestic tourism has grown quite a bit...

    "And of course, we should also stop going to the theatres or renting movies like Cocodrile Dundee."

    We? The USA collective again?

    Believe me, as an Australia, I would love nothing more then for people like you to stop watching bullshit like Crocodile Dundee. That movie shows less about the 'average' Australian as a old west movie does about the 'average' American.

    While i'm at it: I have never seen a koala. I have never seen a crocodile. I have could probably count the amount of times I've seen a kangaroo with one hand.

    Yes, videogame censorship sucks. But this won't stick anyway. It hasn't before, and it won't now. The censoring of TV, movies, and games is getting overhauled now. GTA will probably get a harsh rating under the new system. Whatever. I'd prefer to have to download a copy of some game off the internet to having a government body like the FBI installing spyware and destroying my privacy.

    All well, you've read all this now. Go back to thinking that everyone in Australia is like that pathetic Crocodile Hunter show. I guess your fantasies are more fun then the real world.

  21. Better idea... by Dimensio · · Score: 4, Informative

    Offer to buy the UK version for them and mail that. The game has not been banned in the UK, the UK version is PAL and thus compatable with most Aussie TVs and the regional encoding system (for PS2 games) is set so that the UK and Australia are the same region, so people in Australia can play the UK version without problem.

    Of course, if you live in the UK then its less hassle. Or New Zealand -- I understand that many Aussies are importing from NZ.

  22. LOL by afxgrin · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Since they banned guns thei crime rate has steadily risen. Good job!

    Sorry, I can't help but laugh at that statement.

    I'm also VERY interested in seeing those statistics ... I'm sure crimes related to guns have dropped dramatically. And eventhough there are less murders/deaths in a crime, the crime rate can still go up due to increases in theft, fraud, and smaller forms of crime. It all depends on how you measure crime.

    But to me that comment screams of a bullshit stat., at least you did not write a number as well...

  23. Each country has its own "bans" by renoX · · Score: 3, Insightful

    In France, you can't buy nazy items, cannot say things pro-racism..
    I'm french so I'm problably LESS aware of the things forbidden in France which are legal elsewhere..

    Is oral and anal sex still "banned" in some states of the USA?
    I've always found funny than the "land of freedom" would ban those things..

    Australia is banning a videogame ??
    What is "big news" here??