About a month ago, a new PC game showed up on Steam, as part of their
Greenlight program that allows customers to vote on the next games to be offered on the site. The same day, Steam took it down, later citing inappropriate content.
On the game’s page, Steam left a message saying that: “the item has
been banned for either violating the Steam Terms of Service or the Terms
of Service for Greenlight.” It must have had some pretty questionable
contact to be removed from a server that also sells Grand Theft Auto.
Before I get into the details of this particular game, I want to point
out some of the most popular games that have been sold through Steam or
comparable services: Left 4 Dead, Doom 3, multiple iterations of the Call of Duty series, and most infamously, Grand Theft Auto IV.
Most of these are well-known, even outside the gaming world, but it
doesn’t take a lot of scrutiny to figure out that they are structured
around violence: most of them include references to war, death, and
violence in their titles. Now, to be fair, some of the “greatest hits”
in the gaming world are games like Portal and Minecraft, which involve
no violence and focus instead on puzzles, creativity, world building,
and other engaging and positive activities. The gaming industry, like
the film industry, has a rating system
intended to keep young children from games with inappropriate content,
so violent games are rated M, for 17 and older, but that doesn’t stop
many “underage” teens from playing these bloody and brutal games.
So what was the incredibly offensive content that caused a terms of
service violation and got this game removed from Steam’s Greenlight
page? It must be worse than the mechanism in Grand Theft Auto – or GTA
– in which you can have sex with prostitutes and then kill them. This
behavior is not only possible, but is encouraged by the gameplay
mechanics, because having sex with a prostitute raises your health. The
drawback, according to the wikia page for GTA, is that it costs money – a
problem easily remedied by killing the hooker and taking her money. The sex acts, while not shown in great detail, are also not skipped over (NSFW). This is not objectionable to Steam.
And it definitely must be worse than the scoring system in Manhunt, which encourages you to carry out grisly and sadistic murders. In that game, your score is dependent on how gruesome the executions are (Disturbing images abound), and you are rated from a low “unimpressive” to a high “extremely competent.”
In fact, it is an erotic game called Seduce Me, which focuses
on building relationships – yes, sexual ones – with characters in the
game. The sex appears to be all consensual, and from what little I have
seen of it (the game has yet to come out, but the developer has gameplay
clips up as a preview), your actions in the game have consequences.
So while I can’t make pronouncements about the detail of its content, I
can say that from what the developer released, it seems rather, well,
harmless.
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