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Opinion: How will Project 2025 impact game developers?
The Heritage Foundation's manifesto for the possible next administration could do great harm to many, including large portions of the game development community.
Konami's upcoming survival-horror title Silent Hill: Homecoming has been refused a rating in Australia by the OFLC due to its "excessive violence," making it the fourth game this year to be effectively prohibited from a commercial release in the re
Silent Hill: Homecoming won't see a commercial release in Australia. Citing "excessive violence," the Office of Film and Literature Classification refused to classify Konami's upcoming survival horror title -- no rating means no release in the region. With the decision, Homecoming becomes the fourth title that the OFLC has refused to classify just this year. It releases in North America on September 30, but distributor Atari would have shipped the game in Australia on PlayStation 3, Xbox 360 and PC in November. Atari had similar troubles releasing Marc Eckō's Getting Up: Contents Under Pressure in the country after the Board determined that the title "promotes the crime of graffiti." The previous 2008 titles that the Board refused classification for include Shellshock 2: Blood Trails, Dark Sector, and Fallout 3, the last of which was banned for "realistic visual representations of drugs and their delivery method (bringing) the 'science-fiction' drugs in line with 'real-world' drugs." Developer and publisher Bethesda eventually edited the drug content in Fallout 3 and submitted a revised version of the game, which the Board Classified as MA 15+, or restricted to users age 15 and older. Both Shellshock 2 and Dark Sector 2 were also cleared for release after publishers resubmitted modified versions. The first report of the denied rating comes from Screen Age, which notes that Australian censorship ministers continue to work on implementing a proposed "R18+" classification for mature content, currently developing mechanisms by which to canvas public opinion on the issue.
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