Manhunt 2 appeal won
Manhunt 2 appeal won
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/technology/7137212.stm
So, is the game actually worth any of this fuss? meaning is it actually that violent and is it really worth playing?
So, is the game actually worth any of this fuss? meaning is it actually that violent and is it really worth playing?
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Droid party
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Re: Manhunt 2 appeal won
Whether or not I play this game should be my decision. Not the decision of some dried up old politician who thinks that violence is ok as long as it's them killing people and not in a video game.Curlypaul wrote:http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/technology/7137212.stm
So, is the game actually worth any of this fuss? meaning is it actually that violent and is it really worth playing?
JT wrote:Yeah, like vampire aliens invade and hit us all with a ray beam that paralyzes all of our arms. The only way to deactivate the ray beam and fight back the vampire alien threat is with a complicated series of foot patterns on the device's control board that looks remarkably like a DDR pad. We will all praise this man for saving our lives and buy him a mountain of stuffed animals.
- Daniel Primed
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I disagree. It's interesting to watch. There's quite a lot of difficulty and required skill/thinking about how to carry out the missions. I mean pairing up a guy toting a tin can versus a squad of guards with batons is pretty outrageous, but figuring out how to keep them at bay long enough to kill them is pretty awesome to watch. Yeah, it's violent, but it requires more thought than hacknslash or run-and-gun.
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I bought the first game before it was banned here in Australia and didn't really like it at all. But that isn't really the point. I now don't play the original because it is shit , not because the censors have told that it is too violent. The point is it should be my choice and video games should be viewed in the same way as any other media.Mozgus wrote:If it's anything like the first game, it's shit. And people have said it's even shittier than the first. It's not worth anyone's time. If the pointless violence doesn't interest you, then there is nothing left.
Now the second Manhunt game may well be shit as well, but that should be the reason I don't buy or play it. Not because someone has told me I'm not allowed.
@ curlypaul. I don't believe it got an Australian release, and yes the censors are even more stringent here than anywhere else. Marc Ecko's Getting Up even got banned here and all that I can tell is involved in that is a little bit of spray painting.
The lack of an R rating on video games is absolutely ludicrous and should be addressed. The argument that censors make that gaming is more the domain of kids is complete bullshit. The average age of gamers is going up all the time , hell I read something the other day that said that the average age of gamers is now 33, seems a little high to me but whatever.
JT wrote:Yeah, like vampire aliens invade and hit us all with a ray beam that paralyzes all of our arms. The only way to deactivate the ray beam and fight back the vampire alien threat is with a complicated series of foot patterns on the device's control board that looks remarkably like a DDR pad. We will all praise this man for saving our lives and buy him a mountain of stuffed animals.
If you actually enjoyed those aspects of Manhunt, I recommend you try any of the Tenchus, because even with their flaws, they are vastly superior to Manhunt, plus they actually have story, great music, interesting characters, and appropriate gore.ubelaffe wrote:I disagree. It's interesting to watch. There's quite a lot of difficulty and required skill/thinking about how to carry out the missions. I mean pairing up a guy toting a tin can versus a squad of guards with batons is pretty outrageous, but figuring out how to keep them at bay long enough to kill them is pretty awesome to watch. Yeah, it's violent, but it requires more thought than hacknslash or run-and-gun.
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