I BEHEAD YOU!Mantonio said:At this stage I no longer get angry. I just sigh and file it under 'Muslims gonna Mus'
And if anyone thinks that's offensive... then I really don't care. I am against Islam itself. The people I can deal with.
"ESRA will work as an indicator for game companies in order to know whether the games approve with the Islamic values, and do not violate any of the Islamic traditions in Islamic countries."Jkudo said:You should read first. In fact read the title, "based on values of islam" then see the article for those values.AgentBJ09 said:"While the U.S has a tradition of respecting free speech, there is no equivalent to the First Amendment in many Islamic nations."
There never has been. Sharia is proof enough of that.
Honestly though, I can see publishers not even bothering to release games in Middle Eastern countries, or even accepting a rating from this group, if this is what they have to deal with.
And, if these people are so sensitive to works of fiction and entertainment that they create a separate system just to rate games based on 'respect of Islam', then I honestly do not know what else to say. It's baffling to me, and I don't know weather I should feel sympathy for these people, or think of this as paranoia.
It would be unless, in a lot of the world, religious values and social values were the same thing (oh,wait). So, for a place like Iran or the UAE, it really is just giving a rating based on what the local values are. Not unlike the ESRB in the western world. What I think I'm saying is: everyone grow a pair and stop getting in a tizzy whenever someone's morality is informed by their religion.Danish rage said:Great, another way to blind there people.
Games shouldn´t be ratet on religious values, i find it grotesque.
Why would we be? We're both monotheistic, which isn't common. Yours is a fair observation.Ekonk said:Sometimes things like these remind me that Muslims basically are Christians.
Don't tell to either of them I said that though, they'll be furious!
I don't think it's as much the fact that the social values are motivated by religion as it's what the social values are which is sparking debate and criticism.Del-Toro said:...
It would be unless, in a lot of the world, religious values and social values were the same thing (oh,wait). So, for a place like Iran or the UAE, it really is just giving a rating based on what the local values are. Not unlike the ESRB in the western world. What I think I'm saying is: everyone grow a pair and stop getting in a tizzy whenever someone's morality is informed by their religion.
I truely agree with this statement. He basically said what I was going to say.Danish rage said:Great, another way to blind there people.
Games shouldn´t be ratet on religious values, i find it grotesque.
I support the Christian groups doing it, because they help inform parents so parents don't buy their kids a trashy game for adults. The problem here, though, is that the Muslim version is ideal for being abused - a major organization rating a game on content is only one law away from banning anything that doesn't meet a certain standard.JaredXE said:No different than Christian groups measuring content in games. Don't see the issue.
A matter of time? It has already happened! [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Special_Force]...although it was the Hezbolah and not the Taliban that made it.thahat said:you know its jsut a matter of time before those mad oil sheiks make a reverse call of duty right, i'd be surprised if there isent a mod that makes you drive around in a little honda car, with your ak74 and rpg instead of a humvee and shoot americans instead of taliban XDOnyx Oblivion said:Oh god.
*glances at modern military FPS games with thousands of extremist muslim terrorist enemies*
I am sorry, but I just can't resist...Greg Tito said:...and the Communist Ratings Board gave it a CaP for Capitalist Pigdogs! What's a parent to do?"