Australia Approves Final R18+ Gaming Guidelines
dotarray writes "Despite stories suggesting that a change to the Australian ratings system may be as far as two years away, the Federal Minister for Home Affairs has announced that each Australian state and territory has signed off on the final guidelines required for the introduction of an adult R18+ classification Down Under."
As one of the first people to start a statewide petition to support an R18+ rating for games, I can say that its taken a long time to reach this point, and its not over yet. This is a really encouraging step in the right direction.
What is particularly interesting about it is that it highlights the disparaity between the speed that technology moves, and the speed that our lawmakers move.
I believe we may be an entire generation away from a government of technology-savvy lawmakers.
Shouldn't R18+ simply be a catch all for anything that's not covered by the existing guidelines? What happens to games that don't fall under the definition of R18+?
The very thought that content would have to be approved before getting sold to adults is chilling. This doesn't seem to address that.
Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
Sexual activity may be realistically simulated. The general rule is "simulation, yes--the real thing, no."
What does this mean? No live-action porn movies, but hentai games are okay? If so, what's the reasoning for that?
Too bad the original draft guidelines that allowed the same content as R18+ for film does got knocked back by religious conservative AG's, and these new guidelines that have been agreed to are a watered down R18+ rating that may yet prove to be little more than a re-branded MA15+.
I haven't had a opportunity to go over the new guidelines in detail, but we should before we celebrate.
In the article for R 18+ classifications:
Drug use related to incentives and rewards is not permitted.
Depending on how 'drug' is defined, a game could be banned if using apsrin was part of the plot to recover some ailment.
If this was only related to controlled substances, then a fictional drug could be used instead without problem, making the rule near useless.
Under the R18+ guidelines:
Drug use related to incentives and rewards is not permitted.
I guess that means Pac Man will be banned in Australia :(
In summary no games that contain the words "grand" "theft" or "auto" will be allowed in AU.
This is all fine until an "official" deems a woman in a game has "small breasts that make the game illegal... I am still amazed that Australia went down that road. Next, shaved nether-regions will also be illegal since only "kids" have no hair down there... :/
A couple months ago I sold a copy of GTA:VC I had lying around gathering dust. An hour after getting the call a man in his 40's showed up literally in my doorstep (GPS is a good thing). Imagine my thoughts when I look down and see this 13-year-old spoiled brat next to his father. Never mind there's a big fucking red circle with a big fucking "18" printed in big fucking black in a corner of the box (I live in Europe), and that there's also art of a girl in a bikini inside the box.
I did sell the game to the kid. Money is good.
The kid really was a spoiled brat, because I lived so far away from them his father had already spent what the game was worth on gas to get to my house.
Seriously, wtf is everyone on about. Games are already 'censored' (banned, actually) here. They either meet a criteria, or they are banned for whatever reason tweak's the reviewer's nose; valid, reasonable choice or not. Some have been made to remove certain elements to comply wiht ratings.
With a R18+ rating classification in place, it simply just states the game has criteria not suitable for under age children for example drug use, porngraphic scenes etc. It's a warning, just like at the movies. It's not telling us we cant have it when in fact it's allowing us to have access to more! We can buy R18+ mag's in a service station where children buy their fatty drinks. Why cant we buy games rated 18+ as well!