Legislation For 18+ Games Hits Australian Parliament
angry tapir writes "Legislation to pave the way for an R18+ (adults only) classification of video games has just been introduced into the Australian parliament by the minister for home affairs. The state and territories will still have to pass complementary legislation, however. Currently the highest rating for a game in Australia is MA15+, with games that didn't meet the criteria being refused classification, leading to content being gutted prior to release or games just not being released. The legislation marks a victory for a long campaign by gamers (notably lobby group Grow Up Australia). The current legislation, which will take effect on January 1 next year providing it makes it through the lower and upper houses, merely introduces an R18+ classification, falling short of the complete classification overhaul proposed by the Australian Law Reform Commission."
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I do not know how it works in Australia, but I always think that making something illegal is the best way to promote it as something fun. A R18+ rating only places a game in the cool sector.
This move is interesting in that it satisfies both those wanting stricter limits and those wanting less strict limits.
Under the current system the games that other countries have been rating higher than MA15+ have not been entirely banned, instead the milder half has been pushed down into the MA15 category and the stronger half banned.
So on the less strict side we get access to all those formerly unrated games.
And on the more strict side a bunch of stuff that would otherwise have been squeezed into MA15+ can now be placed in the more appropriate R18+
Now watch the freak conservative 'family' organisations mount a media blitz that results in this getting killed.
Lets face it, in a modern society there are things that are dangerous for kids but should be allowed for adults. Some video games qualify. The old regulation was basically an invitation for censorship. With the 18+ rating, censorship becomes quite difficult.
Most ACs are not even worth the keystrokes to insult them. Be generically insulted by this and ignored otherwise.
I'm more used to hearing negative stories.
Australia |ôstrly, strl-|
adjective
1 to use censorship in defence of Victorian moral values and to forestall the perceived moral implosion and destruction of an entire generation of children. someone somewhere is doing something that makes me twitch - I'd better Australia this.
2 to govern in a paternalistic style that protects its fragile citizens from female sexuality, animated violence, and freedom of expression.
Dear Australians, please don't get your hopes up too much. Speaking from a German experience where we've always had a 18+ rating, as long as the rating is enforced in any form publishers will hate it and "optimize" their games for a 15+ rating anyway, because more potential buyers means more buyers means more money.
So I'm glad for you that you will now actually get some 18+ games, but please don't assume that this means all games will now be uncut and get a release.
So an interesting question would be: How legal were US/UK imports before this new rating and how legal will they be after this change? Legal enough for individuals to do it? Legal enough for a niche market of imported games in online/offline stores?
Will this law change anything though?
Right now, they have to have 18+ games shipped to them or order online. In countries where 18+ is completely legal, we do the same.
In Canada and the US, for example, 18+ games are completely legal (no special restrictions as far as I know). But that does not mean that a single brick and mortar store has anything to do with them. While we were able to convince the government that games are the same as movies, parents continue to think otherwise.
Troll is not a replacement for I disagree.
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