Nintendo's Maniac Mansion Censorship Explored
Thanks to Video-Fenky for a new feature illustrating the Nintendo censorship affecting the NES version of Maniac Mansion. These comments were originally written up in a 1993 issue of Wired, and an unedited prototype NES cart of the classic point n' click adventure has been found to show the changes - though "Nintendo didn't catch the old 'blow up the hamster in the microwave' trick (it was removed in the European version)", changes include editing Nurse Edna's suggestive speeches ("I should have tied you to my bed, cutie!"), and switching graffiti in the bathroom from "For a good time EDNA 3444" to "Call EDNA 3444".
(This comment isn't intended as a flame, or troll, but a suggestive criticism question aimed at editors)
./ subscriber)
./ games section receives about 30 comments an article (roughly 1/5th to 1/20th of normal articles) so if nobody responds, I understand, but I'd like some feedback from the editors please.
Why is this news now, when the game came out 13 years ago, and the wired article came out 11 years ago? Is there nothing else in the queue worth publishing? (I'm not a
Albeit interesting, it's not "news" but if this is what's getting posted, maybe I should start submitting more articles to generate traffic. The
-Christopher Wu
http://www.christopherwu.net/
I have to agree. Reading this article makes me want to dig my NES out of the closet and load up a game of Maniac Mansion. MM is the only Adventure game that I really got into as the problems presented had solutions that were't that far fetched, unlike some of the stuff in the Police quest games. Plus, the sense of humor (the Edsel spaceship in the garage) was clevor and the ability to use multiple characters to complete the story in multiple ways made the game have huge replay value. I usually hate sequels with a passion, but I would welcome a Maniac Mansion Sequel.
Apparently this article is part of the return of tsr, which rocks. tsr did tsr's NES Archive until he put it on hiatus in January 2000. He hasn't touched it since and it looks like this site is like the second coming. Very cool.
Schnapple
They did some more censoring in the N64 era as well. The original Zelda 64 US cartriges were unaltered (I think,) but later 'prints' of the game changed the music in the Fire Temple because it was a Muslim chant (or at least it sounded like one,) changed the design on the Mirror Shield because that was a muslim symbol, and in one scene where Ganan coughs up blood, they changed the color of the blood from red to green. Yes, they changed the color of the blood, the EXACT same thing that they did to censor Mortal Kombat.
So, in conclusion, Nintendo DOES still censor their games. They leave violence alone (for the most part,) but cursing, religion, sex, and booze were still big no-nos for a long time after the ratings were introduced. Perhaps they still are; it's been a while since I've played a game on a Nintendo system. The MK1 debacle, along with getting their asses kicked around by Sony has made them shape up a lot, but old habits die hard.