Dead Island: Riptide Ad Gets a Booting Down Under

Recommended Videos

Andy Chalk

One Flag, One Fleet, One Cat
Nov 12, 2002
45,698
1
0
Dead Island: Riptide Ad Gets a Booting Down Under

An advertisement for Dead Island: Riptide featuring trapped lovers who go out with a bang is a little too much for Australian censors to abide.

You've probably seen the ad for Dead Island: Riptide in which a couple taking a romantic sailboat cruise suddenly finds themselves beached and surrounded by ravenous zombies. (And if you haven't, now's your big chance.) It's not nearly as tear-jerky as the famous CGI trailer [http://www.escapistmagazine.com/news/view/107826-Dead-Island-The-Best-Zombie-Game-Trailer-Ever] that preceded the launch of the original Dead Island, but it's very much in the same vein: touching, tragic and, if you don't know what's coming, unexpected. It's also, in the eyes of the Australian Advertising Standards Bureau, completely inappropriate for television.

The Advertising Standards Bureau received complaints about the spot relating primarily to - spoiler alert, by the way - its depiction of suicide. The Australian publisher of the game, AIE, defended it as "intended to convey the desolate terror afflicting the game characters [and] contextually relevant to the product being advertised, as it conveys the hopelessness of the games' characters as they are faced with the overwhelming horror and violence of vast numbers of zombies hunting them," and also pointed out that there's no actual portrayal of zombie vs. human violence in the ad. But that didn't hold water with the ASB.

"The Board noted that the issue of suicide is a very significant community concern and considered that the use of images which are strongly suggestive of suicide is not appropriate in the context of a television advertisement for a computer game," the ASB wrote in its case report. "The Board considered that by presenting images which suggest suicide the advertisement does depict material which is contrary to Prevailing Community Standards on health and safety."

The ruling came in spite of the fact that the ASB also noted that the ad appeared during an airing of UFC Unleashed - that's real-life cage fighting, for those unfamiliar with the title - and "is not inappropriate for an audience of UFC Unleashed which would be unlikely to include young children."

AIE said in response to the ruling that it is "disappointed... that a depiction of suicide in an overtly fantastical setting is an unjustifiable depiction of violence," but has replaced the ad with something less offensive.

Souce: Kotaku [http://122.99.94.111/cases/0125-13.pdf]


Permalink
 

Zhukov

The Laughing Arsehole
Dec 29, 2009
13,769
5
43
That's... bizarre.

I live in Australia. As a child I remember being horrified by a workplace safety ad I saw in which a blindfolded man is put in a room with a giant bear trap. He stumbles and gropes about for a bit, then moments before he puts his hand on the trap the camera cuts away and there's a loud metallic "snap" sound.

That was at least 15 years ago. The fact that I still remember it says a lot.

Where were you then, ASB?!
 

Bernzz

Assumed Lurker
Legacy
Mar 27, 2009
1,655
3
43
Country
Australia
Gender
Male
Australian logic: bans the only good part about Dead Island. The trailer.

But seriously, this is retarded. People can watch UFC, just proper cage fighting yeah that's fine, but a depiction of suicide (not likely to drive suicidal people off the edge, they're not exactly worried about zombies) is bad? Yep, whatever.

While you're at it, ban the anti-smoking ads. I'm a non-smoker but those ads creep me the fuck out. I don't want to see how much fucking tar is in a smoker's fucking lungs, okay?
 

sethisjimmy

New member
May 22, 2009
601
0
0
Does anyone else think the commercial should have just ended at the lighter flick? That explosion looked really corny and added nothing.

Anyway, funny to see they're still going with the "advertisement way more dramatic and interesting than the actual game" route after the mild backlash the last game received for that. I guess the bottom line is that it gets people curious.
 

Atary77

New member
Feb 27, 2008
152
0
0
Really? Another super somber trailer for a game that doesn't even take itself that seriously? Give me a break.
 

Yopaz

Sarcastic overlord
Jun 3, 2009
6,092
0
0
sethisjimmy said:
Does anyone else think the commercial should have just ended at the lighter flick? That explosion looked really corny and added nothing.

Anyway, funny to see they're still going with the "advertisement way more dramatic and interesting than the actual game" route after the mild backlash the last game received for that. I guess the bottom line is that it gets people curious.
Yeah, I agree with both points. Should have ended with the lighter and they make trailers that are actually interesting and emotional (using that word in a positive way) while the actual game is neither.

I think it's strange that it's getting a ban though, but I guess that's how things go.
 

Andy Chalk

One Flag, One Fleet, One Cat
Nov 12, 2002
45,698
1
0
sethisjimmy said:
Does anyone else think the commercial should have just ended at the lighter flick? That explosion looked really corny and added nothing.
Definitely. Flick the lighter, go to black, roll credits. Would've been so much more impactful. I imagine somebody somewhere said, "HAY PEOPLE LIKE SPLOSIONS" and in the world of mass marketing, that settled it.
 

Me55enger

New member
Dec 16, 2008
1,095
0
0
I thought that trailer was actually quite compelling and emotional.

Y'know, that kind of thing videogames have been striving for since, like, the 90's?
 
Mar 26, 2008
3,429
0
0
I really don't see much game advertisements on Australian TV anyway so they're missing out on a sweet cut of nothing. I don't think this will affect game sales one way or the other.
 

MrHide-Patten

New member
Jun 10, 2009
1,309
0
0
Zhukov said:
That's... bizarre.

I live in Australia. As a child I remember being horrified by a workplace safety ad I saw in which a blindfolded man is put in a room with a giant bear trap. He stumbles and gropes about for a bit, then moments before he puts his hand on the trap the camera cuts away and there's a loud metallic "snap" sound.

That was at least 15 years ago. The fact that I still remember it says a lot.

Where were you then, ASB?!
What about all those work safe ones where we saw people falling and breaking and shattering ribs in gory Mortal Kombat detail?
 

RicoADF

Welcome back Commander
Jun 2, 2009
3,147
0
0
Bernzz said:
*snip*
While you're at it, ban the anti-smoking ads. I'm a non-smoker but those ads creep me the fuck out. I don't want to see how much fucking tar is in a smoker's fucking lungs, okay?
Then complain, that's how this add got banned, personally I'm tempted to complain too except that I don't watch TV anymore so bearly see them lol.
 

lancar

New member
Aug 11, 2009
428
0
0
I actually hadn't seen that trailer before.

I gotta say, compared to the one for the original game, this was nothing. The trailer for the first game was downright brutal, while this was completely weaksauce.

The two trailers do have one thing in common, though. Both say absolutely nothing about what the actual game will be like, so... props for consistency, I guess.
 

MeChaNiZ3D

New member
Aug 30, 2011
3,104
0
0
As an Australian...I'll just keep waiting for all these ASB people to die of old age, then maybe we'll be able to look like a mature country again.
 

MrStab

New member
Mar 24, 2011
237
0
0
Zhukov said:
That's... bizarre.

I live in Australia. As a child I remember being horrified by a workplace safety ad I saw in which a blindfolded man is put in a room with a giant bear trap. He stumbles and gropes about for a bit, then moments before he puts his hand on the trap the camera cuts away and there's a loud metallic "snap" sound.

That was at least 15 years ago. The fact that I still remember it says a lot.

Where were you then, ASB?!
We still get some really bad TAC ads as well. IF you're squeamish then you probably shouldn't watch these.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hTXF179g6zg

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wmufqEW7Gtw

I don't understand how we can have ads like those but we can't have the Dead Island: Riptide trailer. Is it because it's there to promote safety and scare people away from doing stupid shit?
 

Easton Dark

New member
Jan 2, 2011
2,366
0
0
MrStab said:
I don't understand how we can have ads like those but we can't have the Dead Island: Riptide trailer.
the use of images which are strongly suggestive of suicide is not appropriate in the context of a television advertisement for a computer game
Maybe they'd reconsider it if it was a trailer for a movie, but for a "computer game", suicide is apparently a no no.