Yup. It forbids the development, manufacture, distribution, trading and importation of "offensive" video games. I'm watching this bill closely. If it passes, it'll become just one more reason for emigration.Chipperz said:OK, in that case, I have to ask you... Is it a poor translation, or does it mean that if this becomes law, you can't even make "offensive" games in Brazil? If that's the case, I hope even harder that this doesn't go through, because that's ridiculous...
Well, you have answered your own question. ;-)Hashandir said:I mean no disrespect to the brazilian readers, but doesn't that country have _other_ things to worry about? With the gangs and the drugs and not to meantion the deforestation. Should their government really focus on banning games and jailing people for playing them?
Send in the MP!Marq said:I find Brazil offensive. It should be imprisoned.
Sure it does, but these are things that need long term planning, and the longest term planning politicians here do is the time to the next election. And they get votes.Hashandir said:I mean no disrespect to the brazilian readers, but doesn't that country have _other_ things to worry about? With the gangs and the drugs and not to meantion the deforestation. Should their government really focus on banning games and jailing people for playing them?
More to the point, when will this "witch hunt" for videogames ends? And are they really all that bad, since the world was pretty screwed up way before your Average Joe got his hands on a version of Pong.
It's not a democraxy, they don't need votes, they just do what they're told and pick on easy targets.vshade said:Sure it does, but these are things that need long term planning, and the longest term planning politicians here do is the time to the next election. And they get votes.Hashandir said:I mean no disrespect to the brazilian readers, but doesn't that country have _other_ things to worry about? With the gangs and the drugs and not to meantion the deforestation. Should their government really focus on banning games and jailing people for playing them?
More to the point, when will this "witch hunt" for videogames ends? And are they really all that bad, since the world was pretty screwed up way before your Average Joe got his hands on a version of Pong.
So yeah, basically History repeats itself.SilentHunter7 said:Yes. Let's ban "offensive" games. Then we can ban "offensive" movies, and "offensive" books. Then we should ban "offensive" newspapers, and "offensive" news channels. And then we can send people who are being "offensive" to specialized camps.
All for the children, of course.
sliply slope here... no wait, were nearing its end.CantFaketheFunk said:The bill seeks to "curb the manufacture, distribution, importation, distribution, trading and custody, storage, the video games that affect the customs, traditions of the people, their worship, creeds, religions and symbols," with particular attention given to how games treat Christianity - or at least, that's how this slightly-garbled translation reads:
"About Christianity, it is seen in some games someone beat angels while listening to a choir Catholic. It is a common supergroup flapping by hell before the final battle, or even beat Jesus and his twelve apostles,
although they have funny names."
Wow, just... Wow. I was hoping that was a mistranslationbrunoraymundo said:Yup. It forbids the development, manufacture, distribution, trading and importation of "offensive" video games. I'm watching this bill closely. If it passes, it'll become just one more reason for emigration.Chipperz said:OK, in that case, I have to ask you... Is it a poor translation, or does it mean that if this becomes law, you can't even make "offensive" games in Brazil? If that's the case, I hope even harder that this doesn't go through, because that's ridiculous...