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ESRB Demands Hidden Content Review

Gamasutra is reporting that the ESRB is now mandating an audit of hidden game content. The audit is retroactive to the 1st of this month. From the article: "Fully disclosing hidden content accessible as Easter eggs and via cheat codes has always been part of ESRB's explicitly stated requirements when submitting games to be rated. In the July 20 public announcement, which focused on the revocation of a specific game's rating assignment, we formally stated that any pertinent content shipped on the game disc that may be relevant to a rating must be disclosed to ESRB, even if it is not intended to ever be accessed during game play."

4 of 70 comments (clear)

  1. ESRB dupe by 75th+Trombone · · Score: 5, Funny

    "Prior to July 20, we explicitly said you had to tell us about all hidden stuff.

    On July 20, we explicitly said you had to tell us about all hidden stuff."

    ESRB's been learning from Slashdot. Unfortunately, it's been from the editors, not the posters.

    --
    The United States of America: We do what we must because we can.
  2. They're asking for trouble. by KDR_11k · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Many games with female protagonists have nudeskins somewhere in their files, for example. There's a LOT of "hidden" content in many games, often merely because they forgot to remove it from the repository after throwing it out of the game or didn't want to break anything. What if some artist routinely put porn into the unused texture space of some assets (you laugh, that happens, just not with porn)? What if they decided to cull some features to lower the rating but didn't completely delete the stuff?

    I know that a LOT of games would get rated 18 here in Germany should they do such a reevaluation here (often blood effects and stuff get disabled in the german version to avoid a ban from advertising and they can be enabled again by flipping a few bits). Obviously that's not really a problem for the US, the only country specific "taming" I heard of was Giants: Citizen Kabuto, where that Sea Reaper girl is topless in the international version. But cutting of content to get a lower rating happens in the US, too (just that it'll be removed from all versions, not just the US one). EA seems to do it a lot. Wouldn't surprise me if that was done sloppily after the months of 20 hour days leading up to a release. After all, you might have attempted to load that stuff somewhere and instead of going bug hunting you just kill the trigger.

    --
    Justice is the sheep getting arrested while an impartial judge declares the vote void.
  3. Games w/o ratings by lucky130 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Can games be released as "Unrated" in a similar way to movies? If so, I say down with ratings! :)

  4. What game publishers don't want you to know... by hunterx11 · · Score: 5, Funny

    One of the best-kept secrets in the video gaming industry is that video games use "binary code." I'm sure every parent will be shocked to learn that this "binary code" is the exact same medium by which electronic pornography is stored. Even a seemingly innocent game such as "Super Mario Bros. 3" contains pornography with the constituent bits and bytes incidentally being placed in another order. In fact it can be demonstrated that merely by rearranging these bits and bytes, that any video game can be found to contain pornography. I must therefore sincerely reccomend that this licentious and decidedly un-American industry be placed under the most scrutinous regulations lest they should continue to corrupt our youth.

    --
    English is easier said than done.