At last there is light at the end of the tunnel, and beyond that a man waiting with a claw hammer, ready to crack open your skull. Rockstar has confirmed with our friends over at GamesIndustry.biz that following a long struggle with the British Board of Film Classification, Manhunt 2 for the PS2, Wii, and PSP will be in the shops on October 31st, which is some sort of a holiday, or so I’m told.
After the Bryon Review suggested a new system requiring games that would normally receive a 12+ Pan European Game Information (PEGI) rating be subjected to review by the British Board of Film Classification (BBFC), publishers like EA started to worry about even longer UK game release delays. Both the BBFC and PEGI are trying to carve out control in a UK game ratings power scramble. Entertainment & Leisure Software Publishers Association head Paul Jackson explains why PEGI is superior to the BBFC:
Britain’s Byron Review, in which the big-smiling Dr. Tanya Byron made a series of measured, generally reasonable findings and recommendations regarding children’s use of video games and the internet, has now produced an “action plan” from the UK government.
GTAIV didn’t just pass classification muster in Britain, it passed completely uncut. In clearing the game for release, though, the BBFC had to look at (then detail) everything the game had to offer, from the palatable stuff like just driving a car around a virtual city to the less palatable stuff. Like this:
Crisis. Averted. The BBFC, Britain’s classification board, have cleared Grand Theft Auto IV for release, awarding it an adults-only “18″ rating. Bad news for 12 year-olds the country over, but good news for Rockstar, who after a pretty hairy release list of late (ie Bully & Manhunt 2) have managed to get the latest GTA title past three of the toughest classification boards (in Britain, Germany & Australia) in the Western world. Bravo. GTA IV gets BBFC go-ahead [CVG]
As expected, much of the British press (and even isolated pockets of the British gaming press, who should know better) have been grossly misreporting the findings of Dr. Tanya Byron’s pleasantly reasonable review into how the internet and games are adversely affecting children. And if you can’t trust the media to get it right, who can you trust? Yourself, hopefully, so if you’d like to read the review sans alarmist mainstream media spin, the whole thing’s at the link below. Safer Children in a Digital World: the report of the Byron Review [British Department For Schools & Families]
After weeks of getting their knickers in a twist over it, British pundits and interested consumers can now read up on what the long-awaited Byron Review has to say. Commissioned by the British government in response to growing concerns over children’s exposure to unsuitable content in games, it’s findings are already being blown out of proportion by many British press outlets, but in reality are really quite sensible. Dr. Tanya Bryon’s report recommends the adoption of a more recognisable film-style ratings system – including a “12″ rating – clearer, more prominent displays of a game’s ratings on the cover and more effort on the part of parents in monitoring and controlling their children’s gaming and online habits. Like I said, all quite fair and reasonable, really, so if you’re British and are waking up to a falling sky, things aren’t as bad as certain “excitable” elements of the press will have you believe. Byron Review backs movie-style ratings [MCV]