ESRB Responds to “C” Rating from NIMF
New York (NY) - Entertainment Software Ratings Board president Patricia Vance has issued a response to a recently issued "report card" from the National Institute on Media and the Family, calling the rating “grossly misrepresented”.
In its report, the NIMF gave the ESRB a "C", noting dangerous loopholes that have caused "shocking incidents" in video games that concealed graphic moments from the ESRB rating process. Much focus was given to Manhunt 2, which originally received an "AO" (Adults Only) rating, the ESRB’s most restrictive. After the developer, Rockstar, toned it down a bit, the rating was reduced to "M" (Mature).
However, the NIMF still chided the ESRB for not being stricter on the graphically violent PS2 and Wii title, especially because of hacks that unlock more violent content. Vance says the report is unfair.
"NIMF exhibits a significant lack of understanding of and, as a result, grossly misrepresents the facts surrounding last month’s hack into pirated versions of Manhunt 2, a game rated for ages 17 and older that carried prominent and explicit warnings to consumers about its violent content," said Vance.
Vance also pointed to a recent report from the Federal Trade Commission, saying it was much more favorable. The FTC found that nearly 90% of parents with video game-playing children were satisfied with the system, and that three in four used it regularly.
- Unlimited Music Downloads from Nokia
- Motion C5: Mobile Tech Helps Real People
- 30% of HD DVD Users Acess Web Content
- OQO Mobile PC Gets HSDPA Option
- Wii is Most Searched Christmas Toy
- Yahoo Refreshes Flickr With Photo Editing
- Thomas's Music Download Appeal Fails
- German iPhone Gets Locked Up Again
- Art Lebedev's OLED Keyboards from $462
- Google Integrates AIM into Gmail Chat
- DivX Releases 6.8, Adds Multi-Core Support
- SMS Celebrates 15th Anniversary
- Microsoft Working on XP for OLPC
- IBM Comes Closer to Optical Computers
- Dell Coming to Best Buy in US
- Macrovision Buys TV Guide for $2.8 Billion
- Blu-Ray Lowers Price of Player
- JetBlue First to Offer In-Flight E-mail
- HDnet & DirecTV Settle Over Fee Dispute