jamail77 said:
Casual Shinji said:
No you're not.
You simply adressed something that legitimately worried you and thought your sister might not have been aware of.
If I had a family member of that age I wouldn't want them to play GTA5 either... I'd just give 'm The Last of Us.
You'd give them
The Last of Us, but not
GTA V? The former may not be violent and chaotic for the heck of it as the entire GTA series is, but it's got some pretty messed up content. If you don't want family members that young to play GTA, I would think
The Last of Us would be off limits as well. That's just my opinion though.
There is some context to consider. GTA is by and large a parody, which has also in recent entries expressed more of a flare for the dramatic, but still in general a biting satire of... quite a lot of things actually. But it's the kind of satire that can be very, very easily taken at face value if you aren't paying attention. That's one of the reasons why its so easy for people like Jack Thompson or Fox to hype it up as the scum at the heart of their imagined problem.
The Last of Us is, in regards to it's mature content, a perpetually somber and even exhausting experience designed with the sole intent to not only show you horrible things but remind you exactly how horrible they are. They're both subtle commentaries, but GTA's parody is easier to miss if you aren't looking for it then The Last of Us' straight-faced honesty.
I have no problem with the thought of one of my hypothetical children playing GTA when I feel they're emotionally mature enough to handle it, whatever age that might end up being. But I think they'd probably be ready for Last of Us first, and I'd want them to experience that and things like it first.
I'd rather show them something repulsive that intends for them to be appropriately repulsed so they can learn from it and explore those ideas from a place of relative safety, before I'd show them something repulsive that they're supposed to laugh at before they understand why they're supposed to be laughing.
EDIT:
RedDeadFred said:
No you're not.
The rating is there for a reason. There is no way an 11 year old is mature enough to properly deal with that content. If they somehow were, I would question the environment they grew up in...
Now hold on, I don't know that's entirely fair. I am on a whole in favor of having a rating system but it's a suggestion, a source of information. The moment you start treating it as a rule you start running afoul of the arbitrary inconsistencies, the internal politics, and the complete disregard for shades of gray. It should be an individual decision, case by case. And using that decision as the basis of questioning a child's environment, flat-out offhandedly ignoring the possibility that the parents have done that due diligence properly, is laughable at best and quite a lot more worrying at worst.
I first saw The Matrix when I was rather young, don't quite remember how old so that already says something. Certainly much younger then the R rating intended. But my parents felt I was ready for it, and I loved it. Not only did I think it was the coolest movie I had ever seen, I was fascinated by it and we had a lot of great discussions about its ideas.
But would I have had the context to understand everything that Fight Club was trying to say? Hell, if I had seen Paranormal Activity back then I probably never would have slept again. My parents made that call each time, unique to the work in question. You can't make blanket statements about what every 11 year old is ready for, just like you can't judge all R/M rated works as exactly the same. Another kid my age might have been terrified by The Matrix's idea that reality isn't real and anyone could be an Agent, but Paranormal Activity would have rolled off them like the rain.
And remember, just going by the idea that the rating is there for a reason, the relatively tame Halo is M, just like GTA. But Arkham City, which I'd count as considerably more menacing and packing more psychologically adult content then Halo only gets a T, because you technically don't ever kill anyone and Batman is kinda silly right? Just some cartoon for kids. Or maybe you'd rather look at the time Oblivion got re-rated as M because someone made a crappy nude mod and the ESRB broke their usual rules for online or 3rd party content. Which physically cannot effect any of the console versions that still got re-rated. Oh yeah, the rating is sure there for a reason.