PEGI Says We Dare Isn't So Hot

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Andy Chalk

One Flag, One Fleet, One Cat
Nov 12, 2002
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PEGI Says We Dare Isn't So Hot


European game rating agency PEGI stands by its 12+ classification of Ubisoft's We Dare [http://www.amazon.co.uk/UBI-Soft-We-Dare-Wii/dp/B004ISL3WY/ref=sr_1_2?ie=UTF8&qid=1299546788&sr=8-2], saying it's not nearly as sexy as the publisher makes it out to be.

We Dare looked like pretty racy stuff when the 12+ rating [http://www.escapistmagazine.com/news/view/108018-Ubisoft-Unveils-a-Sexy-Wii-Minigame-Compilation-for-Adults] on it. Parents and Parliamentarians alike were angry and upset over the prospect of young children legally buying and playing a dirty sex game and called for the release to be held up while the matter was more thoroughly investigated. But PEGI isn't budging on its decision.

"PEGI does not take into account the context of a game when rating it, we only look at the contents of the game," the agency told Cubed3 [http://www.cubed3.com/news/15264]. "[We Dare] has been rated as a PEGI 12 because it contains mild swearing, minor assault on a human-like character and words/activities that amount to obvious sexual innuendo, explicit sexual descriptions or images and sexual posturing."

A PEGI rep said a higher rating was considered because of a "specific [sexual] atmosphere" but was rejected by the Video Standards Council, an independent organization that verifies the ratings. "This means that the game itself is in fact less sexual/offensive than the marketing campaign leads us to believe," the rep said. "For example, you cannot see real spanking in the game. There is a 'stripping game' but you don't have to undress; throwing away keys or anything that reduces your weight is good enough."

Nonetheless, The Sun [http://www.ubi.com] reported that one version of the infamous YouTube trailer ends with the couples swapping partners and going off to have sex, while another has all four of them "romping together."

Barring unforeseen legislative delays, We Dare is expected to come out later this month in Europe and the U.K. Ubisoft has "emphatically" ruled out [http://www.escapistmagazine.com/news/view/108068-Ubisofts-Sexy-Minigame-Collection-Too-Naughty-for-U-S] a North American release.


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Eri

The Light of Dawn
Feb 21, 2009
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If this is anything like Foxs reporting of the mass effect 2 blue alien sex scene, there's nothing to worry about.
 

Rayne870

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Nov 28, 2010
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Love how parents get all pissed that their kids will be buying dirty or violent games, and forget that they should do some parenting on their end to control that. They can't buy games if parents control the money, and if the kids have jobs then they are old enough to watch pixel boobs and blood.

OT: It is still really stupid that Ubisoft doesn't have the guts to release this game in the US and Canada. I mean really, we already have spin the bottle and strip poker, maybe they are just afraid of competition?
 

FlyAwayAutumn

Rating: Negative Awesome
May 19, 2009
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Awwww, us Americans don't get to play?

Whatever I don't have a wii anyway. Also I'm honestly surprised by the rating. The commercial was, uh, sexy enough. But again, whatever.
 

The Great JT

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Oct 6, 2008
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Ubisoft, you're not helping the video game industry look like you're appealing to a mature audience. You're making us look like children and sex criminals. I can understand you want to appeal to an older audience and make sort of a for-adults sexy board game, I get that. But in case you haven't noticed, video games have kind of an image problem right now, and a game such as We Dare isn't going to help that.
 

NezumiiroKitsune

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Mar 29, 2008
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Hmm, I hadn't even heard of this game, shows how much attention I pay to Wii-board releases and tabloid news.

What can I say? I haven't played the game, maybe it's as tame as PEGI believe. I think they're slightly ignorant (the tabloid) to how most kids between 12 - 13 have probably already began actively looking for adult material, mostly boobs at that age when it comes to boys, and this game isn't even going to appear in their radar. They seem to live in an idealistic 1950s but where celebrities are the supreme overlords of society.

Tell me I'm wrong? Sexual curiosity is unavoidable and starts as soon as puberty does, and boobs become the epitome of cool things to find after "real" ghost videos, schadenfreude videos, and whatever musical revolutionary is currently making their cloned RnB magnum opi.
 

shadowform

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Jan 5, 2009
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Well... yes.

It's a shovelware minigame compilation with an actual marketing push behind it. Hopefully the "Ages 12 and up" rating won't impact the "SEXY ADULT GAMES" image they're trying to sell it as.
 

Asuka Soryu

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Jun 11, 2010
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Ah, good old idiot parents and politicians. The first sign of anything sexual wether it is sexual or just a game of Twister basicaly, they freak out and pull out the: 'won't someone think of the children' B.S.
 

OldAccount

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Sep 10, 2010
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I actually disagree with this decision quite a bit. Ratings boards should absolutely take context into account when making a decision. Otherwise situations like this loophole are formed which result in bad press for the industry. We already get enough morality police claiming that the ratings system has failed without giving them things like this to back up their claims.
 

Kinguendo

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Apr 10, 2009
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Hahaha, thats funny. Anyone else imagine a teacher grading papers when they read this? "Not sexy enough, 12+" XD
 

Asuka Soryu

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Jun 11, 2010
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believer258 said:
I want to know where all the controversy over being able to chainsaw people in half in Gears of War went, or all the controversy over gangster-simulating in GTA. Instead, we're concerned that our kids are going to be playing this (rather disturbing) game where you smack your partner's (more than likely invisible or virtual) bum.
Nope, not even that.

"For example, you cannot see real spanking in the game."
 

Asuka Soryu

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Jun 11, 2010
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SAT4NSLILHELPER said:
I actually disagree with this decision quite a bit. Ratings boards should absolutely take context into account when making a decision. Otherwise situations like this loophole are formed which result in bad press for the industry. We already get enough morality police claiming that the ratings system has failed without giving them things like this to back up their claims.
While I admit that they should get a high rating more of a punishment for such a stupid commercial, like Dead Space 2's wich was obviously made to get attention.

You know what they say, 'there's no such thing as bad publicity'

But even then, the game should never be judged by a commercial.

Worst case scenario, some adolescent horny 12-14 year old picks this up and gets pissed off when it turns out to be nothing like the commercial.

They did their job, they rated this game based off the game itself, not some dumb commercial that was about things that weren't part of the game.

I can't help but fill this is just like that Nightrap game.
 

Danpascooch

Zombie Specialist
Apr 16, 2009
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Jarrid said:
EA markets mediocre games to the LCD and pre-teens, and now Ubisoft is trying to convince people that their half-assed attempts at innuendo is a "mature" game...
Yeah, how dare EA market their games to all those impressionable Liquid-Crystal Display televisions!
 

Danpascooch

Zombie Specialist
Apr 16, 2009
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SAT4NSLILHELPER said:
I actually disagree with this decision quite a bit. Ratings boards should absolutely take context into account when making a decision. Otherwise situations like this loophole are formed which result in bad press for the industry. We already get enough morality police claiming that the ratings system has failed without giving them things like this to back up their claims.
What loophole? The loophole of actually judging a game by the content in the game?

If some idiot strips in front of his TV, that's not really the game showing you inappropriate stuff, it's the idiot stripping.
 

Danpascooch

Zombie Specialist
Apr 16, 2009
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The Great JT said:
Ubisoft, you're not helping the video game industry look like you're appealing to a mature audience. You're making us look like children and sex criminals. I can understand you want to appeal to an older audience and make sort of a for-adults sexy board game, I get that. But in case you haven't noticed, video games have kind of an image problem right now, and a game such as We Dare isn't going to help that.
I think the game is idiotic, but what part of stupid flirting makes you a "sex criminal"?
 

knight56

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Aug 12, 2009
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I think Ubisoft is just doing this to make fun of the people who overreact to video games.