In a move predicted by more than a few comments at Joystiq, Rockstar's controversial title Bully has received a T for Teen rating from the ESRB. Questionable content includes Crude Humor, Language, Sexual Themes, Use of Alcohol and Tobacco, Violence. Go ahead, let that one sink in, we'll wait.What does the T rating mean, exactly? Most retail outlets follow one simple rule of thumb: don't sell Mature-rated games to minors. According to the ESRB's official ratings guide, "Titles rated T (Teen) have content that may be suitable for ages 13 and older." Come October, little Billy won't need to ask him mom or bribe a homeless man into buying the game, he can do it himself.
Wal-mart, after pulling Bully pre-orders a few weeks back (for various, disputed reasons), is now taking pre-orders on its web site.
With the political season in full swing, we imagine more than a few politicians will cite this case as an example of the ESRB's negligence, or how the ratings system is "out of touch with" or "destroying" American values. Keep in mind the game has no guns or knives, disproving the theory that this title is a "Columbine simulator" (as purported by anti-game activist Jack Thompson).
Bully will be released October 16 for the PlayStation 2.
















(Page 1) Reader Comments
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This will be an amusing final act to the media circus.
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They could have just given this game an "M" even though it might not have deserved it just to avoid controversy, but they didn't. My respect for them just went way up.
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I have to believe that he will use this to his advantage. It's, by NO means, a set back for him.
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I don't think anything will ever stop him. He lost support from the group he was claiming association with, he kept going. Stuff like this happens to him all the time and he just keeps on truckin'. This is common when you have a dumbass of his caliber.
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PS3 is for TEH KIDZXOR!
SONY CATERS TOWARDS KIDS!!!
ok, Done with that.
Seriously though, I wonder how Jack will take it that kids can buy this themselves. And to Parents..... Just because a game is rated T, you still might not find it suitable for your child (if you spend any time raising poor thing!!!) It is up to you the parents to decide if your child/ren plays this game or not Quit trying to leave it up to the government.
any BTW, how come every time I post with my Hotmail account Joystiq it doesn't go through and I don't get my confirmation email!!!!!
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this game just isnt exciting...
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Then we'll go Back to the Future in my DeLorean.
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Fact is movies and games are held to different standards. The question is what (if anything) can be done about it? I'm guessing nothing except waiting for the culture to catch up with the idea that games (like movies) have an adult audience too.
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I know, right? And how often do you hear anyone complain about how movies these days are incredibly violent, full of foul language, sex, and drugs and still get PG-13 ratings because the F word was only said once and/or the S word was said no more than 3 times?
I went and saw Snakes on a Plane when it hit theaters. At my local theater, they will stop you at least once if you try to take a kid into an R rated movie. I've seen people get stopped more than 3 times though to listen to the staff wan them about the content. I've never seen anyone care, though. They just take their 8 year olds right in to see it. I did see one family leave during the SoaP sex scene, though. Boobies are a no-no.
If parents are just going to ignore the warnings, then what else can we do? Banning these movies and games outright isn't a viable solution, the industries would lose billions, and 99.9999999% of the people who see the movies or play the games don't go on to become killers anyway. So what other option is there? Should we start beating people who look like they might be parents trying to buy a violent game for their kids? Should orientation at the local GameStop include peeling the skin off the new employees before pushing them in a vat of salt to discourage them from selling violent games to minors? Maybe we should just ban people from reproducing, that way there will be no kids to kill each other!
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And just look at all the action movies that have a good story and might come across fantastic, but they edit it down to get that PG-13 rating and they turn out to be utter crap. Bully will be that way. If they'd pushed the limits like they usually do, got Todd Solondz to do the writing and story design, Bully could have been a masterpiece of drama and a truly visceral and true experience to play. But they cut it to T rating and it'll be a stupid little game. I think you'd get a better idea of what being bullied is like from watching Welcome to the Dollhouse or even Lucas.
The only media kids shouldn't be exposed to is disturbing stuff like Schindler's List and Hotel Rwanda and such. That stuff should not be shown to preteens. Teens are the perfect audience for it. Teenagers are emotionally developed enough that those movies will disturb and upset them, like they're SUPPOSED TO.
/looking forward to a future where games present real emotional experiences and have something to say
//and not believing the secret to developing a sense of morality and humanity is sheltering from life
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Movies and games don't hurt people. Neither do books. Or radio. Or plays. Or paintings. Or dancing. Or singing. Or the thousand other things we've already went through as a species where people were insisting that kids would be somehow (never specified) 'damaged' or 'affected' by exposure to concepts and pictures and words.
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Of course, they were before.
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Quite simply, it's hard to have a "Columbine Simulator" when the main character doesn't have access to a gun. But let's not weigh down the hyperbole and rhetoric with lil' things like the FACTS...
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The Teen rating though is a big stick in the eye to the anti-gaming sect. They want to compare Bully (I thought it was renamed though) to GTA. This will be a lot harder now that it's rated the same as The Sims.
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I totally called this one!
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i cant wait to play this game just for the soudtrack!
wahoo
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That's really so objectionable to anyone under 18? Don't believe all the spin you're hearing from the reactionary mainstream media loonies...
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the name was changed for the European release only, I believe, to 'dog eat dog' in Latin. forgive me, I can't remember what the translation is.
this game receiving a T rating surprises me, but it doesn't improve my confidence in the ESRB. if there's a giant fracas about this game, the ESRB will just hang Take Two out to dry just as they did with Bethesda over the Oblivion user mod fiasco. the ESRB needs more comprehensive regulations about game content and ratings. and they need to stand behind those ratings more strongly and not wuss out and sell the developers down the river.
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The more disturbing aspect of this, to me, is that the video game industry has improved its stable of lobbyists, and is nipping at the heals of the music and movie industries, at least in terms of their sphere of "influence" in law-making circles.
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